Monitoring the Coating of Single DNA Origami Nanostructures with a Molecular Fluorescence Lifetime Sensor

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Abstract

The high functionality of DNA nanostructures makes them a promising tool for biomedical applications, their intrinsic instability under application-relevant conditions, still remains challenging. Protective coating of DNA nanostructures with materials like silica or cationic polymers has evolved as a simple, yet powerful strategy to improve their stability even under extreme conditions. While over time, various materials and protocols have been developed, the characterization and quality assessment of the coating is either time consuming, highly invasive or lacks detailed insights on single nanostructures. Here, we introduce a cyanine dye based molecular sensor designed to non-invasively probe the coating of DNA origami by either a cationic polymer or by silica, in real-time and on a single nanostructure level. The cyanine dye reports changes in its local environment upon coating via increased fluorescence lifetime induced by steric restriction and water exclusion. Exploiting the addressability of DNA origami, the molecular sensor can be placed at selected positions to probe the coating layer with nanometer precision. We demonstrate the reversibility of the sensor and use it to study the stability of the different coatings in degrading conditions. To showcase the potential for correlative studies, we combine the molecular fluorescence lifetime sensor with DNA PAINT super-resolution imaging to investigate coating and structural integrity as well as preserved addressability of DNA nanostructures. The reported sensor presents a valuable tool to probe the coating of DNA nanodevices in complex biochemical environments in real-time and at the single nanosensor level and aids the development of novel stabilization strategies.

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