event

Dynamic sensing at the nanoscale with DNA nanotechnology

Primary tabs

School of Physics Soft Condensed Matter & Biophysics: Prof. Michael Poirier, Ohio State University

DNA nanotechnology, especially scaffolded DNA origami, has emerged into a field that fabricates well-defined nanostructures with unprecedented geometric complexity and precision. This technology is proposed to eventually provide integral components for complex nanomachines and nanofactories. The power of DNA as a nanoscale building material is that it can be designed to self assemble into complex nanostructures that are held together by numerous kBT-scale (0.025 eV) interactions. This allows DNA-based structures to be both globally stable and locally dynamic. Currently, DNA nanotechnology has a number of applications, including drug delivery, single molecule sensing, and templating of crystalline nanoparticles. However, applications rely largely on static nanomaterial properties. I will discuss the overall current state of the DNA nanotechnology field and our work on developing DNA based nanosensors, whose functionality relies on structural dynamics.

Status

  • Workflow Status:Published
  • Created By:Alison Morain
  • Created:01/22/2016
  • Modified By:Fletcher Moore
  • Modified:04/13/2017