Duke
University scientists have used the self-assembling
properties of DNA to mass-produce nanometer-scale
structures in the shape of a 4x4 grids, on which
patterns of molecules can be specified. They said
the achievement represents a step toward mass-producing
electronic or optical circuits at a scale 10 times
smaller than the smallest circuits now being manufactured.
Instead of using silicon as the platform for tiny
circuits, as is done in the current manufacturing
technique of photolithography, the Duke researchers
used DNA strands to create grids less than one ten-millionth
of a meter square. The smallest features on these
square DNA lattices are approximately five to 10
billionths of a meter (nanometers), according to
the scientists, compared with about 65 nanometers
in silicon circuits created using photolithography.
To demonstrate their ability to mass-produce grids
with infinitesimal patterns, the scientists created
batches of trillions of separate grids with the letters "D," "N" and "A" written
with a protein that can be seen through atomic force microscopy (AFM). An image of
the grids with the letter patterns is available at < http://www.dukenews.duke.edu/mmedia/hires/dna.jpg>.
The scientists, members of the Triangle-area TROIKA collaboration to construct computing devices
using DNA, were able to create the grids by using the binding properties of DNA
to ensure that large numbers of DNA strands would assemble themselves in specified
patterns.
The two corresponding authors on the paper were Thom LaBean, an associate research
professor of computer science and an adjunct associate professor
of the practice of chemistry at Duke, and Christopher Dwyer, an assistant professor
of electrical and computer engineering and computer science. Their research is
scheduled to be published in volume 45 of the journal Angewandte Chemie and released
early online Dec. 23, 2005. It was funded by the National Science Foundation.
"The process we've described creates lattices -- with patterns we specify --
at least tenfold smaller than the best lithography being used right now," LaBean
said. "Plus, because we're using DNA building blocks that assemble themselves,
we can simultaneously make trillions of copies of a desired structure."
To create the tiny DNA grids, LaBean, Dwyer and their colleagues began with tiny
building blocks they called "tiles." Each tile was made up of strands of DNA
bent like pipe cleaners into the shape of a cross. In the middle of each cross
was a loop of DNA that can be attached to another molecule that can in turn bind
to a protein molecule to give the tile a tag visible by AFM. Each arm of the
cross, about 10 nanometers long, had a pair of "sticky ends" where the DNA strand
was made of up of unpaired bases that tend to bind with reciprocal bases. Tiles
with complementary sticky ends link together when mixed.
The
structure of the tiles created the molecular equivalent
of puzzle pieces that would self-assemble only
in a specific arrangement when mixed together,
with the DNA loop loaded with a desired "cargo" molecule
that would form the structure the researchers wished
to create. In one experiment, the scientists specified
16 unique puzzle pieces that fit together as a 4x4
grid that formed a puzzle spelling the letter "D." Because
each piece would only match up with its predetermined
neighbors, the scientists could mix together a trillion
of each type of tile in one batch to generate a trillion
4x4 grids.
Coming up with the specifications for each DNA strand in the tiles proved to
be a complex mathematical problem. The challenge was to specify a sequence of
bases for each pair of sticky ends at the end of each of the 16 tiles' four arms
(a total of 128 sequences) that would bind a tile only with its intended neighbor
and not with any other tiles or itself.
"It turns out there are a lot of combinations to consider," Dwyer said. "That
meant running a lot of searches. We had to run three hundred computers for
two weeks to get an answer."
The answer for the optimal base configurations for each DNA strand was disclosed
to Duke's Office of Licensing and Ventures as a first step towards a potential
patent.
The researchers have not yet produced a functional circuit on a grid. However,
in future studies, they plan to generate grids larger than four tiles by four
tiles and to populate the grids with molecules that can conduct electrons or
light waves to form simple circuits. Based on the characteristics those circuits
would have, Dwyer and colleagues have drawn up designs for computer chips.
The researchers also may explore how their method of assembling tiles can be
used create biological structures that could act as tiny sensors.
Source: Duke University
|