Will this new superpower molecule revolutionize science? It has the potential to revolutionize nanotechnology – and it also explains one of Nature’s intriguing enigmas; why do we have a right hand and a left hand?
From:
Southern Denmark University
By Birgitte
Svennevig
January 10, 2022 -- When scientists discovered DNA
and learned how to control it, not only science but society was revolutionized.
Today researchers and the medical industry routinely create artificial DNA
structures for many purposes, including diagnosis and treatment of diseases.
Now an
international research team reports to have created a powerful supermolecule
with the potential to further revolutionize science.
The work is
published in Nature Communications . Authors are from University of
Southern Denmark (DK), Kent State University (USA), Copenhagen University
(Denmark), Oxford University (UK) and ATDBio (UK). Lead authors are Chenguang
Lou, associate professor, University of Southern Denmark and Hanbin Mao,
professor, Kent State University, USA.
It may allow us to make more advanced
nanostructures, for example, for detecting diseases
--Chenguang Lou, associate
professor
The
researchers describe their supermolecule as a marriage between DNA and
peptides.
DNA is one of
the most important biomolecules, and so are peptides; peptide structures are
used, among other things, to create artificial proteins and various
nanostructures.
- If you
combine these two, as we have, you get a very powerful molecular tool, that may
lead to the next generation of nanotechnology; it may allow us to make more
advanced nanostructures, for example, for detecting diseases, says
corresponding author Chenguang Lou, associate professor at Department of
Physics, Chemistry and Pharmacy, University of Southern Denmark.
The cause of Alzheimer’s
According to
the researchers, another example is that this marriage of peptides to DNA can
be used to create artificial proteins, which will be more stable and thus more
reliable to work with than natural proteins, which are vulnerable to heat, UV,
chemical reagents, etc.
- Our next
step will be to investigate whether it can be used to explain the cause of
Alzheimer’s disease in which malfunctional peptides are culprits, says the
other corresponding author, Hanbin Mao, professor at Chemistry and
Biochemistry, Kent State University.
The research
work reports the mechanical properties of a new structure composed of three-stranded
DNA structures and three-stranded peptide structures. It may sound simple, but
it is far from.
Left and right in nature
It is rare in
Nature that DNA and peptide structures are chemically linked like this new
structure is.
In Nature,
they often behave like cats and dogs, though some key interactions are
essential to any living organisms. One possible reason for this is their
so-called chirality – sometimes also described as handedness.
All
biological structures, from molecules to the human body, have a fixed
chirality; think of our heart, which is always positioned in the left side of
our body. DNA is always right-handed and peptides are always left-handed, so
trying to combine them is a highly challenging task.
Changing left to right
- Imagine you
want to stack your two hands by matching each finger while both palms face the
same direction. You will find out it is impossible to do it. You can only do
this if you can trick your two hands into having the same chirality, says
Hanbin Mao.
This is what
the research team has done; tricked the chirality. They have changed the
peptide chirality from left to right, so it fits with the chirality of the DNA
and works with it instead of repelling it.
- This is the
first study to show that the chirality of DNA and peptide structures can
communicate and interact, when their handedness is changed, says Chenguang Lou.
So why do we have a left and a right hand?
The
researchers also report to be the first to provide an answer to why the
biological world is chiral:
-- The answer
is energy: the chiral world requires the lowest energy to maintain, therefore
it is most stable, says Hanbin Mao.
In other
words: Nature will always seek to spend as little energy as possible.
https://www.sdu.dk/en/nyheder/forskningsnyheder/supermolekyle
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