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ICCAD
2005
IEEE

Design of DNA origami

14 years 7 months ago
Design of DNA origami
— The generation of arbitrary patterns and shapes at very small scales is at the heart of our effort to miniaturize circuits and is fundamental to the development of nanotechnology. Here I review a recently developed method for folding long single strands of DNA into arbitrary two-dimensional shapes using a raster fill technique – ‘scaffolded DNA origami’. Shapes up to 100 nanometers in diameter can be approximated with a resolution of 6 nanometers and decorated with patterns of roughly 200 binary pixels at the same resolution. Experimentally verified by the creation of a dozen shapes and patterns, the method is easy, high yield, and lends itself well to automated design and manufacture. So far, CAD tools for scaffolded DNA origami are simple, require hand-design of the folding path, and are restricted to two dimensional designs. If the method gains wide acceptance, better CAD tools will be required.
Paul W. K. Rothemund
Added 16 Mar 2010
Updated 16 Mar 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where ICCAD
Authors Paul W. K. Rothemund
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