Publication | Open Access
Biomimetic Autonomous Enzymatic Nanowalker of High Fuel Efficiency
53
Citations
43
References
2016
Year
EngineeringBiological ComputingArtificial NanowalkerAutonomous Bipedal NanowalkerBiomimetic ChemistryDna NanotechnologyChemical EngineeringSoft RoboticsBioenergeticsMolecular MotorsBiochemical EngineeringDna ComputingHigh Fuel EfficiencyBiophysicsNanoroboticsChemical EnergyNanotechnologyMolecular EngineeringBioelectronicsSynthetic BiologyMedicine
Replicating efficient chemical energy utilization of biological nanomotors is one ultimate goal of nanotechnology and energy technology. Here, we report a rationally designed autonomous bipedal nanowalker made of DNA that achieves a fuel efficiency of less than two fuel molecules decomposed per productive forward step, hence breaking a general threshold for chemically powered machines invented to date. As a genuine enzymatic nanomotor without changing itself nor the track, the walker demonstrates a sustained motion on an extended double-stranded track at a speed comparable to previous burn-bridge motors. Like its biological counterparts, this artificial nanowalker realizes multiple chemomechanical gatings, especially a bias-generating product control unique to chemically powered nanomotors. This study yields rich insights into how pure physical effects facilitate harvest of chemical energy at the single-molecule level and provides a rarely available motor system for future development toward replicating the efficient, repeatable, automatic, and mechanistically sophisticated transportation seen in biomotor-based intracellular transport but beyond the capacity of the current burn-bridge motors.
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