Title: Protein delivery: DNA nanostructures and cell-surface targeting
1Protein delivery DNA nanostructures and
cell-surface targeting
Harvard iGEM August 27, 2006
2The Machine
- Goal Future modularized drug delivery
target cell
protein
3DNA Nanostructures Overview
- Can design DNA double helices to stick together
and form interesting structures.
- Dr. Ned Seeman, NYU
- Dr. William Shih, Harvard
- Paul Rothemund, Caltech
A 1.7-kilobase single-stranded DNA that folds
into a nanoscale octahedron WILLIAM M. SHIH, JOEL
D. QUISPE GERALD F. JOYCE?Nature 427, 618?621
(2004) doi10.1038/nature02307
4Motivation Why DNA?
- Fascinating area of research
- The power of DNA
- Watson-Crick base pairing is enormously strong
- Self-assembly
- Highly programmable, designable
- Specificity - targeting to cells
5Design Details
6Design Details Scaffolded Oragami
7Design Details Scaffolded Oragami
8Design Details Scaffolded Oragami
9Design Details Positional Control
10Design Details Positional Control
11Design Details Positional Control
12Design Details Positional Control
13Design Details Positional Control
14Design Details Positional Control
15Progress
- Built a number of barrel designs
- Exciting EM Images
- Purifying Nanostructures (nearly there after 1
month of trials)
16Exciting EM Images
17Exciting EM Images
18EM Images (snakes on a grid)
- c5.0 barrel (10 nM), 0.7 uranyl formate
- Appear to be lining up end to end, probably
because of the stain
Images courtesy Shawn Douglas
19To be continued
protease
- Can a protein be protected from protease if
attached inside the box? - Lid attachment
- Lid removal
protein
protease
protein
20Acknowledgements
- Harvard TFs - Shawn Douglas, Nick Stroustrup,
Chris Doucette - Harvard advisers - Dr. William Shih, Dr. George
Church, Dr. Pamela Silver, Dr. Alain Viel,
Dr. Jagesh Shah, Dr. Radhika Nagpal - iGEM ambassadors
- iGEM directors