The DNA circuits created by researchers at Arizona State University (ASU) and Duke University in the US is capable of splitting and combining current, much like an adapter that can connect multiple appliances to a wall outlet.
"The ability of DNA to transport electrical charge has been under investigation for some time," said Nongjian Tao, from ASU.
"Splitting and recombining current is a basic property of conventional electronic circuits. We'd like to mimic this ability in DNA, but until now, this has been quite challenging," Tao said.
In the study published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, a special form, known as G-quadruplex (G4) DNA is used to improve charge transport properties.
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G4 DNA is composed of four rather than two strands of DNA that are rich in the nucleotide guanine.
"DNA is capable of conducting charge, but to be useful for nanoelectronics, it must be able to direct charge along more than one path by splitting or combining it," said Peng Zhang, an assistant research professor at Duke University.
"This is the first step needed to transport charge through a branching structure made exclusively of DNA. It is likely that further steps will result in successful DNA-based nanoelectronics that include transistor-like devices in self-assembling 'pre-programmed' materials," he said.
DNA is a highly attractive material for the design and creation of new nanoelectronics.
The molecule's four nucleotide bases labelled A,T,C and G can be programmed to self-assemble into iconic double-helices.
In G4 structures, DNA takes the form of stacked guanine bases that form hydrogen bonds with their two immediate neighbours.
The G4 structure at the heart of the new experiments, with its improved properties of charge transport, allowed researchers, for the first time, to design effective conducting pathways between the stacked G-quadruplex DNA and the double-stranded wires that form the terminals for either splitting or merging electrical current flow.
Earlier efforts to create such a Y-shaped electrical junction using only conventional double-stranded DNA had failed, due to the very poor charge transport properties inherent in the circuit's junction points.
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