Jonathan R. Burns
University College London
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jonathan R. Burns.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Jonathan R. Burns; Kerstin Göpfrich; James W. Wood; Vivek V. Thacker; Eugen Stulz; Ulrich F. Keyser; Stefan Howorka
Holding tight: An artificial membrane nanopore assembled from DNA oligonucleotides carries porphyrin tags (red), which anchor the nanostructure into the lipid bilayer. The porphyrin moieties also act as fluorescent dyes to aid the microscopic visualization of the DNA nanopore.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2016
Jonathan R. Burns; Astrid Seifert; Niels Fertig; Stefan Howorka
Biological ion channels are molecular gatekeepers that control transport across cell membranes. Recreating the functional principle of such systems and extending it beyond physiological ionic cargo is both scientifically exciting and technologically relevant to sensing or drug release. However, fabricating synthetic channels with a predictable structure remains a significant challenge. Here, we use DNA as a building material to create an atomistically determined molecular valve that can control when and which cargo is transported across a bilayer. The valve, which is made from seven concatenated DNA strands, can bind a specific ligand and, in response, undergo a nanomechanical change to open up the membrane-spanning channel. It is also able to distinguish with high selectivity the transport of small organic molecules that differ by the presence of a positively or negatively charged group. The DNA device could be used for controlled drug release and the building of synthetic cell-like or logic ionic networks.
ACS Nano | 2015
Astrid Seifert; Kerstin Göpfrich; Jonathan R. Burns; Niels Fertig; Ulrich F. Keyser; Stefan Howorka
Membrane-spanning nanopores from folded DNA are a recent example of biomimetic man-made nanostructures that can open up applications in biosensing, drug delivery, and nanofluidics. In this report, we generate a DNA nanopore based on the archetypal six-helix-bundle architecture and systematically characterize it via single-channel current recordings to address several fundamental scientific questions in this emerging field. We establish that the DNA pores exhibit two voltage-dependent conductance states. Low transmembrane voltages favor a stable high-conductance level, which corresponds to an unobstructed DNA pore. The expected inner width of the open channel is confirmed by measuring the conductance change as a function of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) size, whereby smaller PEGs are assumed to enter the pore. PEG sizing also clarifies that the main ion-conducting path runs through the membrane-spanning channel lumen as opposed to any proposed gap between the outer pore wall and the lipid bilayer. At higher voltages, the channel shows a main low-conductance state probably caused by electric-field-induced changes of the DNA pore in its conformation or orientation. This voltage-dependent switching between the open and closed states is observed with planar lipid bilayers as well as bilayers mounted on glass nanopipettes. These findings settle a discrepancy between two previously published conductances. By systematically exploring a large space of parameters and answering key questions, our report supports the development of DNA nanopores for nanobiotechnology.
Angewandte Chemie | 2014
Jonathan R. Burns; Noura Al-Juffali; Sam M. Janes; Stefan Howorka
DNA-based cytotoxic agents: Nanopores composed of folded DNA featuring a hydrophobic belt of ethyl phosphorothioate groups insert into bilayer membranes and kill cancer cells. The mode by which the pores achieve cell killing is elucidated with confocal microscopy.
Molecules | 2011
Jonathan R. Burns; Jurgita Zekonyte; Giuliano Siligardi; Rohanah Hussain; Eugen Stulz
We describe the synthesis of terpyridine modified DNA strands which selectively form DNA nanotubes through orthogonal hydrogen bonding and metal complexation interactions. The short DNA strands are designed to self-assemble into long duplexes through a sticky-end approach. Addition of weakly binding metals such as Zn(II) and Ni(II) induces the formation of tubular arrays consisting of DNA bundles which are 50-200 nm wide and 2-50 nm high. TEM shows additional long distance ordering of the terpy-DNA complexes into fibers.
Nature Communications | 2017
Vishal Maingi; Jonathan R. Burns; Jaakko J. Uusitalo; Stefan Howorka; Siewert J. Marrink; Mark S.P. Sansom
Recently developed DNA-based analogues of membrane proteins have advanced synthetic biology. A fundamental question is how hydrophilic nanostructures reside in the hydrophobic environment of the membrane. Here, we use multiscale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to explore the structure, stability and dynamics of an archetypical DNA nanotube inserted via a ring of membrane anchors into a phospholipid bilayer. Coarse-grained MD reveals that the lipids reorganize locally to interact closely with the membrane-spanning section of the DNA tube. Steered simulations along the bilayer normal establish the metastable nature of the inserted pore, yielding a force profile with barriers for membrane exit due to the membrane anchors. Atomistic, equilibrium simulations at two salt concentrations confirm the close packing of lipid around of the stably inserted DNA pore and its cation selectivity, while revealing localized structural fluctuations. The wide-ranging and detailed insight informs the design of next-generation DNA pores for synthetic biology or biomedicine.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Lea Messager; Jonathan R. Burns; Jungyeon Kim; Denis Cecchin; James Hindley; Alice L. B. Pyne; Jens Gaitzsch; Giuseppe Battaglia; Stefan Howorka
Abstract Chemistry plays a crucial role in creating synthetic analogues of biomacromolecular structures. Of particular scientific and technological interest are biomimetic vesicles that are inspired by natural membrane compartments and organelles but avoid their drawbacks, such as membrane instability and limited control over cargo transport across the boundaries. In this study, completely synthetic vesicles were developed from stable polymeric walls and easy‐to‐engineer membrane DNA nanopores. The hybrid nanocontainers feature selective permeability and permit the transport of organic molecules of 1.5 nm size. Larger enzymes (ca. 5 nm) can be encapsulated and retained within the vesicles yet remain catalytically active. The hybrid structures constitute a new type of enzymatic nanoreactor. The high tunability of the polymeric vesicles and DNA pores will be key in tailoring the nanocontainers for applications in drug delivery, bioimaging, biocatalysis, and cell mimicry.
New Journal of Chemistry | 2014
ThaoNguyen Nguyen; Pär Håkansson; Ruth Edge; David Collison; Bernard A. Goodman; Jonathan R. Burns; Eugen Stulz
EPR spectroscopy was used to investigate both single and double stranded DNA modified with a variable number of copper(II) porphyrins. The spectra of the porphyrin–DNA complexes resemble those of the Cu(II) porphyrin building blocks, but with appreciable differences in the values for the g∥ and A∥ parameters. In addition, a significant half-field signal is observed, which is interpreted as resulting from copper–copper interactions in both the double strand (dsDNA) and the single strand DNA (ssDNA). Analysis of the EPR spectra gives evidence for cluster formation of three or more DNA strands. From the intensity ratio of the half-field and main transition, the average Cu–Cu distance is estimated to be 6.5–8.9 A. The association of copper centres is consistent with hydrophobic porphyrin stacking, both intra- and intermolecularly, as has previously been observed with other DNA complexes using UV-vis and CD spectroscopy.
Small | 2016
Roland Hager; Jonathan R. Burns; Martyna Grydlik; Alma Halilovic; Thomas Haselgrübler; F. Schäffler; Stefan Howorka
The biofunctionalization of nanopatterned surfaces with DNA origami nanostructures is an important topic in nanobiotechnology. An unexplored challenge is, however, to co-immobilize proteins with DNA origami at pre-determined substrate sites in high contrast relative to the nontarget areas. The immobilization should, in addition, preferably be achieved on a transparent substrate to allow ultrasensitive optical detection. If successful, specific co-binding would be a step towards stoichiometrically defined arrays with few to individual protein molecules per site. Here, we successfully immobilize with high specificity positively charged avidin proteins and negatively charged DNA origami nanoplates on 100 nm-wide carbon nanoislands while suppressing undesired adsorption to surrounding nontarget areas. The arrays on glass slides achieve unprecedented selectivity factors of up to 4000 and allow ultrasensitive fluorescence read-out. The co-immobilization onto the nanoislands leads to layered biomolecular architectures, which are functional because bound DNA origami influences the number of capturing sites on the nanopatches for other proteins. The novel hybrid DNA origami-protein nanoarrays allow the fabrication of versatile research platforms for applications in biosensing, biophysics, and cell biology, and, in addition, represent an important step towards single-molecule protein arrays.
ACS Synthetic Biology | 2018
Jonathan R. Burns; Baptiste Lamarre; Alice L. B. Pyne; James E. Noble; Maxim G. Ryadnov
A synthetic topology for everted viruses is reported. The topology is a single-stranded virion DNA assembled into a hollow cube with exterior decorated with HIV-Tat transduction domains. The cube incorporates a pH-responsive lid allowing for the controlled encapsulation of functional proteins and their transfer and release into live cells. Unlike viruses, which are protein shells with a [3,5]-fold rotational symmetry that encase nucleic acids, these cubes are [3, 4]-fold DNA boxes encapsulating proteins. Like viruses, such everted DNA-built viruses are monodisperse nanoscale assemblies that infect human cells with a specialist cargo. The design offers a bespoke bottom-up platform for engineering nonpolyhedral, nonprotein synthetic viruses.