arXiv Open Access 2024

How we simulate DNA origami

Sarah Haggenmueller Michael Matthies Matthew Sample Petr Šulc
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Abstrak

DNA origami consists of a long scaffold strand and short staple strands that self-assemble into a target 2D or 3D shape. It is a widely used construct in nucleic acid nanotechnology, offering a cost-effective way to design and create diverse nanoscale shapes. With promising applications in areas such as nanofabrication, diagnostics, and therapeutics, DNA origami has become a key tool in the bionanotechnology field. Simulations of these structures can offer insight into their shape and function, thus speeding up and simplifying the design process. However, simulating these structures, often comprising thousands of base pairs, poses challenges due to their large size. OxDNA, a coarse-grained model specifically designed for DNA nanotechnology, offers powerful simulation capabilities. Its associated ecosystem of visualization and analysis tools can complement experimental work with in silico characterization. This tutorial provides a general approach to simulating DNA origami structures using the oxDNA ecosystem, tailored for experimentalists looking to integrate computational analysis into their design workflow.

Penulis (4)

S

Sarah Haggenmueller

M

Michael Matthies

M

Matthew Sample

P

Petr Šulc

Format Sitasi

Haggenmueller, S., Matthies, M., Sample, M., Šulc, P. (2024). How we simulate DNA origami. https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.13206

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Tahun Terbit
2024
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en
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arXiv
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Open Access ✓