Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Enzyme-free translation of DNA into sequence-defined synthetic polymers structurally unrelated to nucleic acids

2013; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 5; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/nchem.1577

ISSN

1755-4349

Autores

Jia Niu, Ryan Hili, David R. Liu,

Tópico(s)

Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques

Resumo

The translation of DNA sequences into corresponding biopolymers enables the production, function and evolution of the macromolecules of life. In contrast, methods to generate sequence-defined synthetic polymers with similar levels of control have remained elusive. Here, we report the development of a DNA-templated translation system that enables the enzyme-free translation of DNA templates into sequence-defined synthetic polymers that have no necessary structural relationship with nucleic acids. We demonstrate the efficiency, sequence-specificity and generality of this translation system by oligomerizing building blocks including polyethylene glycol, α-(D)-peptides, and β-peptides in a DNA-programmed manner. Sequence-defined synthetic polymers with molecular weights of 26 kDa containing 16 consecutively coupled building blocks and 90 densely functionalized β-amino acid residues were translated from DNA templates using this strategy. We integrated the DNA-templated translation system developed here into a complete cycle of translation, coding sequence replication, template regeneration and re-translation suitable for the iterated in vitro selection of functional sequence-defined synthetic polymers unrelated in structure to nucleic acids. An enzyme-free system that translates DNA into sequence-defined non-nucleic acid polymers including polyethylene glycol, α-(D)-peptides and β-peptides is described. Sequence-defined polymers with molecular weights of 26 kDa containing 16 consecutively coupled building blocks and 90 densely functionalized β-amino acids were translated from DNA templates using this strategy.

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