Software-controlled assembly of oligomers

Lead Research Organisation: University of York
Department Name: Electronics

Abstract

We propose to create a molecular machine that will build new materials under software control. The output of the machine will be chains of building blocks linked by covalent bonds. The machine is modular and is designed to accept many different building blocks, from small molecules to nanoparticles, with a wide range of physical and chemical properties. In order to drive its development we will concentrate on using it to create two target products: a molecular wire, capable of transporting energy and electrical charge, and a catalyst. Software control starts with specification by the end-user of a sequence of building blocks. The target sequence is encoded in an instruction tape which can be read by the machine: the tape is itself a molecule, a synthetic DNA oligomer. The target sequence of building blocks is automatically converted into a control sequence of DNA bases, and the tape is produced by commercial solid-phase synthesis. The job of the machine is to read the instruction tape and to form the bonds between building blocks in the specified sequence. Every component of this molecular factory is itself a molecule: our ambition is to develop the system to the point where it could be distributed to end users as chemicals in plastic vials.

Publications

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Costa Santini C (2013) A clocked finite state machine built from DNA. in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)

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Santini CC (2012) A DNA network as an information processing system. in International journal of molecular sciences

 
Description The main outcome of this project was the study and feasibility of using DNA elements to participate in computation. This project was linked with a larger EPSRC funded project (EP/F055951/1) where developments from this project were used to test building block, adaptor and coupling chemistry using clocked motion of a molecular machine along a DNA instruction tape.
Exploitation Route The novel clocked DNA system forms the fundamental basis of a new type of computation where DNA machines could be coupled with electronic substrates, potentially providing an interface between artificial processing and biological processing.
Sectors Education,Electronics,Healthcare

 
Description The fundamental nature of the DNA clock machines developed in this project have been used to underpin future funding opportunities, currently with research councils. It has also been published in a number of journal articles.
Sector Education