Main menu

A DNA nanoscope that identifies and precisely localizes over a hundred unique molecular features with nanometer accuracy


Techniques that can both spatially map out molecular features and discriminate many targets would be highly valued for their utility in studying fundamental nanoscale processes. In spite of decades of development, no current technique can achieve both nanoscale resolution and discriminate hundreds of targets.

Here, we report the development of a novel bottom-up technology that: (a) labels a sample with DNA barcodes, (b) measures pairwise-distances between labeled sites and writes them into DNA molecules, (c) reads the pairwise-distances by sequencing and (d) robustly integrates this noisy information to reveal the geometry of the underlying sample.

We demonstrate our technology on DNA origami, which are complex synthetic nanostructures. We both spatially localized and uniquely identified over a hundred densely packed unique elements, some spaced just 6 nm apart, with an average spatial localization accuracy (RMS deviation) of ~2 nm. The bottom-up, sequencing-enabled mechanism of the DNA nanoscope is fundamentally different from top-down imaging, and hence offers unique advantages in precision, throughput and accessibility.

Authors: Nikhil Gopalkrishnan, Sukanya Punthambaker, Thomas E. Schaus, George M. Church, Peng Yin

入门指南

购买 MinION 启动包 Nanopore 商城 测序服务提供商 全球代理商

联系我们

Intellectual property Cookie policy Corporate reporting Privacy policy Terms & conditions Accessibility

关于 Oxford Nanopore

Contact us 领导团队 媒体资源和联系方式 投资者 在 Oxford Nanopore 工作 BSI 27001 accreditationBSI 90001 accreditationBSI mark of trust
Chinese flag