Researchers have synthesized a molecular structure designed from single and double-stranded pieces of DNA that responds to a similarly modeled track, by walking down it autonomously. The walker places foot-over-foot as each appendage is attracted biochemically to the next hairpin along the track. As foot and hairpin make contact, the hairpin unravels. The free end of the hairpin then catches a complementary hairpin that is free-floating in the solution that the whole system is immersed in. Both hairpins coil together forming a "waste duplex" (or the familiarly shaped double helix), releasing the walker's foot for its next stride. If the walker reaches the end of the track successfully, it leaves behind non-reusable material, and the track is spent. Its travels are more perilous than may seem if it lifts the wrong foot and finds itself trapped between two open hairpins, the walker will fall off never seeing the end of its track.
Full story at:http://nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=111001Accolades:“Thank you for the beautiful illustration you did. I learned about the science by examining the art -- that is surely the mark of a successful science image.”
--Kathy CovertProgram Officer
National Science Foundation
“Really gorgeous - thanks so much for letting us use this! Much appreciated, and I look forward to working with you again in the future.”
--Lauren GoldScience writer
Cornell Chronicle
“Wow! This really adds so much more information to the news release. A thousand thank you's.”
--Diane Banegas Public Affairs Officer
National Science Foundation
Also featured in:Nanowerkhttp://www.nanowerk.com/news/newsid=4265.php