Nanoscale Structure and Elasticity of Pillared DNA Nanotubes
Himanshu Joshi, Atul Kaushik, Nadrian C. Seeman, Prabal K. Maiti

TL;DR
This study models pillared DNA nanotubes at the atomic level, demonstrating their stability and measuring their elastic properties, including persistence length and stretch modulus, which increase with added pillars, indicating enhanced rigidity.
Contribution
Introduces a detailed atomistic model of pillared DNA nanotubes and quantifies how structural modifications affect their elastic properties.
Findings
Nanotubes are stable over 200 ns simulations.
Persistence length is around 10 μm, much larger than dsDNA.
Adding pillars increases stretch modulus and rigidity.
Abstract
We present an atomistic model of pillared DNA nanotubes (DNTs) and their elastic properties which will facilitate further studies of these nanotubes in several important nanotechnological and biological applications. In particular, we introduce a computational design to create an atomistic model of a 6-helix DNT (6HB) along with its two variants, 6HB flanked symmetrically by two double helical DNA pillars (6HB+2) and 6HB flanked symmetrically by three double helical DNA pillars (6HB+3). Analysis of 200 ns all-atom simulation trajectories in the presence of explicit water and ions shows that these structures are stable and well behaved in all three geometries. Hydrogen bonding is well maintained for all variants of 6HB DNTs. We calculate the persistence length of these nanotubes from their equilibrium bend angle distributions. The values of persistence length are ~10 {\mu}m, which is 2…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
