Litcius/Paper detail

Self-Assembling Nucleic Acid Nanostructures Functionalized with Aptamers

Abhichart Krissanaprasit, Carson M. Key, Sahil Pontula, Thomas H. LaBean

2021Chemical Reviews183 citationsDOI

Abstract

Researchers have worked for many decades to master the rules of biomolecular design that would allow artificial biopolymer complexes to self-assemble and function similarly to the diverse biochemical constructs displayed in natural biological systems. The rules of nucleic acid assembly (dominated by Watson–Crick base-pairing) have been less difficult to understand and manipulate than the more complicated rules of protein folding. Therefore, nucleic acid nanotechnology has advanced more quickly than de novo protein design, and recent years have seen amazing progress in DNA and RNA design. By combining structural motifs with aptamers that act as affinity handles and add powerful molecular recognition capabilities, nucleic acid-based self-assemblies represent a diverse toolbox for use by bioengineers to create molecules with potentially revolutionary biological activities. In this review, we focus on the development of self-assembling nucleic acid nanostructures that are functionalized with nucleic acid aptamers and their great potential in wide ranging application areas.

Topics & Concepts

AptamerNucleic acidChemistryNanotechnologyNucleic acid structureComputational biologyMolecular recognitionDNA nanotechnologyRNADNABiochemistryMoleculeBiologyGeneticsGeneOrganic chemistryMaterials scienceAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesDNA and Nucleic Acid ChemistryRNA Interference and Gene Delivery