Self‐Assembly of G‐Rich Oligonucleotides Incorporating a 3′–3′ Inversion of Polarity Site: A New Route Towards G‐Wire DNA Nanostructures
2017
Obtaining DNA nanostructures with potential applications in drug discovery, diagnostics, and electronics in a simple and affordable way represents one of the hottest topics in nanotechnological and medical sciences. Herein, we report a novel strategy to obtain structurally homogeneous DNA G-wire nanostructures of known length, starting from the short unmodified G-rich oligonucleotide d(5′-CGGT-3′–3′-GGC-5′) (1) incorporating a 3’–3′ inversion of polarity site. The reported approach allowed us to obtain long G-wire assemblies through 5′–5′ π–π stacking interactions in between the tetramolecular G-quadruplex building blocks that form when 1 is annealed in the presence of potassium ions. Our results expand the repertoire of synthetic methodologies to obtain new tailored DNA G-wire nanostructures.
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