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Dive into the research topics where Dominik J. Kauert is active.

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Featured researches published by Dominik J. Kauert.


Nano Letters | 2011

Direct Mechanical Measurements Reveal the Material Properties of Three-Dimensional DNA Origami

Dominik J. Kauert; Thomas Kurth; Tim Liedl; Ralf Seidel

The application of three-dimensional DNA origami objects as rigid mechanical mediators or force sensing elements requires detailed knowledge about their complex mechanical properties. Using magnetic tweezers, we directly measure the bending and torsional rigidities of four- and six-helix bundles assembled by this technique. Compared to duplex DNA, we find the bending rigidities to be greatly increased while the torsional rigidities are only moderately augmented. We present a mechanical model explicitly including the crossovers between the individual helices in the origami structure that reproduces the experimentally observed behavior. Our results provide an important basis for the future application of 3D DNA origami in nanomechanics.


Nano Letters | 2014

Shape-Controlled Synthesis of Gold Nanostructures Using DNA Origami Molds

Seham Helmi; Christoph Ziegler; Dominik J. Kauert; Ralf Seidel

We introduce a new concept that allows the synthesis of inorganic nanoparticles with programmable shape. Three-dimensional DNA origami nanostructures harboring an internal cavity are used as molds. A small gold nanoparticle within the cavity nucleates solution-based gold deposition leading to mold filling. We demonstrate the fabrication of 40 nm long rodlike gold particles with quadratic cross section and the formation of higher order assemblies of the obtained particles, which is mediated by their DNA shell.


Biophysical Journal | 2015

Extending the Range for Force Calibration in Magnetic Tweezers

Peter Daldrop; Hergen Brutzer; Alexander Huhle; Dominik J. Kauert; Ralf Seidel

Magnetic tweezers are a wide-spread tool used to study the mechanics and the function of a large variety of biomolecules and biomolecular machines. This tool uses a magnetic particle and a strong magnetic field gradient to apply defined forces to the molecule of interest. Forces are typically quantified by analyzing the lateral fluctuations of the biomolecule-tethered particle in the direction perpendicular to the applied force. Since the magnetic field pins the anisotropy axis of the particle, the lateral fluctuations follow the geometry of a pendulum with a short pendulum length along and a long pendulum length perpendicular to the field lines. Typically, the short pendulum geometry is used for force calibration by power-spectral-density (PSD) analysis, because the movement of the bead in this direction can be approximated by a simple translational motion. Here, we provide a detailed analysis of the fluctuations according to the long pendulum geometry and show that for this direction, both the translational and the rotational motions of the particle have to be considered. We provide analytical formulas for the PSD of this coupled system that agree well with PSDs obtained in experiments and simulations and that finally allow a faithful quantification of the magnetic force for the long pendulum geometry. We furthermore demonstrate that this methodology allows the calibration of much larger forces than the short pendulum geometry in a tether-length-dependent manner. In addition, the accuracy of determination of the absolute force is improved. Our force calibration based on the long pendulum geometry will facilitate high-resolution magnetic-tweezers experiments that rely on short molecules and large forces, as well as highly parallelized measurements that use low frame rates.


Nano Letters | 2016

Simultaneous Single-Molecule Force and Fluorescence Sampling of DNA Nanostructure Conformations Using Magnetic Tweezers.

Felix E. Kemmerich; Marko Swoboda; Dominik J. Kauert; M. Svea Grieb; Steffen Hahn; Friedrich W. Schwarz; Ralf Seidel; Michael Schlierf

We present a hybrid single-molecule technique combining magnetic tweezers and Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements. Through applying external forces to a paramagnetic sphere, we induce conformational changes in DNA nanostructures, which are detected in two output channels simultaneously. First, by tracking a magnetic bead with high spatial and temporal resolution, we observe overall DNA length changes along the force axis. Second, the measured FRET efficiency between two fluorescent probes monitors local conformational changes. The synchronized orthogonal readout in different observation channels will facilitate deciphering the complex mechanisms of biomolecular machines.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Amphipathic DNA Origami Nanoparticles to Scaffold and Deform Lipid Membrane Vesicles

Aleksander Czogalla; Dominik J. Kauert; Henri G. Franquelim; Veselina Uzunova; Yixin Zhang; Ralf Seidel; Petra Schwille

We report a synthetic biology-inspired approach for the engineering of amphipathic DNA origami structures as membrane-scaffolding tools. The structures have a flat membrane-binding interface decorated with cholesterol-derived anchors. Sticky oligonucleotide overhangs on their side facets enable lateral interactions leading to the formation of ordered arrays on the membrane. Such a tight and regular arrangement makes our DNA origami capable of deforming free-standing lipid membranes, mimicking the biological activity of coat-forming proteins, for example, from the I-/F-BAR family.


Nano Letters | 2015

DNA Origami Nanoneedles on Freestanding Lipid Membranes as a Tool To Observe Isotropic−Nematic Transition in Two Dimensions

Aleksander Czogalla; Dominik J. Kauert; Ralf Seidel; Petra Schwille; Eugene P. Petrov

We introduce a simple experimental system to study dynamics of needle-like nanoobjects in two dimensions (2D) as a function of their surface density close to the isotropic-nematic transition. Using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, we find that translational and rotational diffusion of rigid DNA origami nanoneedles bound to freestanding lipid membranes is strongly suppressed upon an increase in the surface particle density. Our experimental observations show a good agreement with results of Monte Carlo simulations of Brownian hard needles in 2D.


Nano Letters | 2018

DNA-Mold Templated Assembly of Conductive Gold Nanowires

Türkan Bayrak; Seham Helmi; Jingjing Ye; Dominik J. Kauert; Jeffrey Kelling; Tommy Schönherr; Richard Weichelt; Artur Erbe; Ralf Seidel

We introduce a new concept for the solution-based fabrication of conductive gold nanowires using DNA templates. To this end, we employ DNA nanomolds, inside which electroless gold deposition is initiated by site-specific attached seeds. Using programmable interfaces, individual molds self-assemble into micrometer-long mold superstructures. During subsequent internal gold deposition, the mold walls constrain the metal growth, such that highly homogeneous nanowires with 20-30 nm diameters are obtained. Wire contacting using electron-beam lithography and electrical conductance characterization at temperatures between 4.2 K and room temperature demonstrate that metallic conducting wires were produced, although for part of the wires, the conductance is limited by boundaries between gold grains. Using different mold designs, our synthesis scheme will, in the future, allow the fabrication of complex metal structures with programmable shapes.


Faraday Discussions | 2013

Switchable domain partitioning and diffusion of DNA origami rods on membranes

Aleksander Czogalla; Eugene P. Petrov; Dominik J. Kauert; Veselina Uzunova; Yixin Zhang; Ralf Seidel; Petra Schwille


Biophysical Journal | 2018

High Speed Mechanical Measurements Based on DNA Origami Torque Sensors

Dominik J. Kauert; Ralf Seidel


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Diffusion and Freezing Transition of Rod-Like DNA Origami on Freestanding Lipid Membranes

Eugene P. Petrov; Aleksander Czogalla; Dominik J. Kauert; Ralf Seidel; Petra Schwille

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Hergen Brutzer

Dresden University of Technology

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Thomas Kurth

Dresden University of Technology

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Veselina Uzunova

Dresden University of Technology

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Yixin Zhang

Dresden University of Technology

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Alexander Huhle

Dresden University of Technology

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