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      Enzyme-Free Translation of DNA into Sequence-Defined Synthetic Polymers Structurally Unrelated to Nucleic Acids

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      Nature chemistry

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          Abstract

          The translation of DNA sequences into corresponding biopolymers enables the production, function, and evolution of the macromolecules of life. In contrast, methods to generate sequence-defined synthetic polymers with similar levels of control have remained elusive. Here we report the development of a DNA-templated translation system that enables the enzyme-free translation of DNA templates into sequence-defined synthetic polymers that have no necessary structural relationship with nucleic acids. We demonstrate the efficiency, sequence-specificity, and generality of this translation system by oligomerizing building blocks including polyethylene glycol (PEG), α-( d)-peptides, and β-peptides in a DNA-programmed manner. Sequence-defined synthetic polymers with molecular weights of 26 kDa containing 16 consecutively coupled building blocks and 90 densely functionalized β-amino acid residues were translated from DNA templates using this strategy. We integrated the DNA-templated translation system developed here into a complete cycle of translation, coding sequence replication, template regeneration, and re-translation suitable for the iterated in vitro selection of functional sequence-defined synthetic polymers unrelated in structure to nucleic acids.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101499734
          35773
          Nat Chem
          Nat Chem
          Nature chemistry
          1755-4330
          1755-4349
          12 June 2014
          03 March 2013
          April 2013
          26 December 2014
          : 5
          : 4
          : 282-292
          Affiliations
          Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
          Author notes
          [* ]Correspondence: drliu@ 123456fas.harvard.edu
          Article
          NIHMS437984
          10.1038/nchem.1577
          4277153
          23511416
          b78a7e58-263a-4b87-9ea4-be0ce8d96330
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Chemistry
          Chemistry

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