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BioWires: Conductive DNA Nanowires in a Computationally-Optimized, Synthetic Biological Platform for Nanoelectronic FabricationDNA is an ideal template for a biological nanowire-it has a linear structure several atoms thick; it possesses addressable nucleobase geometry that can be precisely defined; and it is massively scalable into branched networks. Until now, the drawback of DNA as a conducting nanowire been, simply put, its low conductance. To address this deficiency, we extensively characterize a chemical variant of canonical DNA that exploits the affinity of natural cytosine bases for silver ions. We successfully construct chains of single silver ions inside double-stranded DNA, confirm the basic dC-Ag+-dC bond geometry and kinetics, and show length-tunability dependent on mismatch distribution, ion availability and enzyme activity. An analysis of the absorbance spectra of natural DNA and silver-binding, poly-cytosine DNA demonstrates the heightened thermostability of the ion chain and its resistance to aqueous stresses such as precipitation, dialysis and forced reduction. These chemically critical traits lend themselves to an increase in electrical conductivity of over an order of magnitude for 11-base silver-paired duplexes over natural strands when assayed by STM break junction. We further construct and implement a genetic pathway in the E. coli bacterium for the biosynthesis of highly ionizable DNA sequences. Toward future circuits, we construct a model of transcription network architectures to determine the most efficient and robust connectivity for cell-based fabrication, and we perform sequence optimization with a genetic algorithm to identify oligonucleotides robust to changes in the base-pairing energy landscape. We propose that this system will serve as a synthetic biological fabrication platform for more complex DNA nanotechnology and nanoelectronics with applications to deep space and low resource environments.
Document ID
20170005640
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Vecchioni, Simon
(Columbia Univ. New York, NY, United States)
Toomey, Emily
(Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. Cambridge, MA, United States)
Capece, Mark C.
(Stanford Univ. Stanford, CA, United States)
Rothschild, Lynn
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Wind, Shalom
(Columbia Univ. New York, NY, United States)
Date Acquired
June 16, 2017
Publication Date
June 13, 2017
Subject Category
Exobiology
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN42325
Meeting Information
Meeting: International Meeting on Synthetic Biology (SB7.0)
Location: Singapore
Country: Singapore
Start Date: June 13, 2017
End Date: June 16, 2017
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX14AM51H
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
DNA
single silver ions
biological nanowire
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