DNA-Programmed Lipid Nanoreactors for Synthesis of Carbohydrate Mimetics by Fusion of Aqueous Sub-attoliter Compartments

Xinwei Tian, Nikolaj Alexander Risgaard, Philipp M.G. Löffler, Stefan Vogel*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Lipid nanoreactors are biomimetic reaction vessels (nanoreactors) that can host aqueous or membrane-associated chemical and enzymatic reactions. Nanoreactors provide ultra-miniaturization from atto- to zeptoliter volumes per reaction vessel with the major challenge of encoding and spatio-temporal control over reactions at the individual nanoreactor or population level, thereby controlling volumes several orders of magnitude below advanced microfluidic devices. We present DNA-programmed lipid nanoreactors (PLNs) functionalized with lipidated oligonucleotides (LiNAs) that allow programming and encoding of nanoreactor interactions by controlled membrane fusion, exemplified for a set of carbohydrate mimetics with mono- to hexasaccharide azide building blocks connected by click-chemistry. Programmed reactions are initiated by fusion of distinct populations of nanoreactors with individually encapsulated building blocks. A focused library of triazole-linked carbohydrate-Cy5 conjugates formed by strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloadditions demonstrated LiNA-programmed chemistry, including two-step reaction schemes. The PLN method is developed toward a robust platform for synthesis in confined space employing fully programmable nanoreactors, applicable to multistep synthesis for the generation of combinatorial libraries with subsequent analysis of the molecules formed, based on the addressability of the lipid nanoreactors.

Original languageEnglish
Journal Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume145
Issue number36
Pages (from-to)19633–19641
ISSN0002-7863
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24. Aug 2023

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