Nucleic acid-based dissipative, out-of-equilibrium systems are introduced as functional assemblies emulating transient dissipative biological transformations. One system involves a Pb-ion-dependent DNAzyme fuel strand-driven network leading to the transient cleavage of the fuel strand to "waste" products. Applying the Pb-ion-dependent DNAzyme to two competitive fuel strand-driven systems yields two parallel operating networks. Blocking the competitively operating networks with selective inhibitors leads, however, to gated transient operation of dictated networks, yielding gated catalytic operations. A second system introduces a "non-waste" generating out-of-equilibrium, dissipative network driven by light. The system consists of a -azobenzene-functionalized photoactive module that is reconfigured by light to an intermediary state consisting of -azobenzene units that are thermally recovered to the original -azobenzene-modified module. The cyclic transient photoinduced operation of the device is demonstrated. The kinetic simulation of the systems allows the prediction of the transient behavior of the networks under different auxiliary conditions.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8386649 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc02091a | DOI Listing |
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