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Microarrays are high-throughput and relatively inexpensive assays that can be automated to analyze large quantities of data at a time. They are used in genome-wide studies to compare gene or protein expression under two varied conditions, such as healthy and diseased states. Microarrays consist of glass or silica slides on which probe molecules are covalently attached through surface functionalization. Most commonly, the slides are prepared through the chemisorption of silanes to silica...
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DNA Origami-Mediated Substrate Nanopatterning of Inorganic Structures for Sensing Applications
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Multivalent engineering of bio interfaces with DNA-based nanomaterials.

Shujie Li1, Yameng Lou1, Maartje M C Bastings1

  • 1Programmable Biomaterials Laboratory, Institute of Materials, Interfaculty Bioengineering Institute, School of Engineering, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale Lausanne, Lausanne 1015, Switzerland.

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Summary

Biological functions rely on multiple simultaneous interactions (multivalency), not single events. DNA nanotechnology enables precise spatial control of these interactions for advanced bioengineering applications.

Keywords:
Bio-interfacesCell-cell communicationDNA nanotechnologyMultivalent engineeringNanodiagnosticsSelectivityTargeting

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Area of Science:

  • Biotechnology
  • Materials Science
  • Molecular Biology

Background:

  • Biological processes depend on multivalency: simultaneous, localized interactions for robustness and specificity.
  • Single-molecule targeting often fails to replicate these complex biological interactions.
  • Engineering multivalent systems is crucial for mimicking natural biointerface interactions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Introduce the concept of multivalent engineering: spatial programming of ligands.
  • Highlight DNA nanomaterials as tools for precise ligand organization.
  • Discuss applications and challenges of multivalent engineering in biology.

Main Methods:

  • Review of fundamental principles of multivalency at biointerfaces.
  • Exploration of DNA-based design strategies for spatial ligand organization.
  • Analysis of recent advances in multivalent engineering.

Main Results:

  • DNA nanomaterials allow nanometer-scale ligand arrangement, enhancing binding avidity.
  • Spatial programming enables geometry-dependent and context-sensitive targeting.
  • Multivalent engineering offers a new paradigm for controlling biological outcomes.

Conclusions:

  • Multivalent engineering, enabled by DNA nanotechnology, is a powerful approach for biointerface applications.
  • This field drives innovation in diagnostics, therapeutics, and synthetic biology.
  • Further research is needed to overcome challenges for in vivo applications.