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      Multivalenz als chemisches Organisations- und Wirkprinzip

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          Polyvalent Interactions in Biological Systems: Implications for Design and Use of Multivalent Ligands and Inhibitors

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            The cluster glycoside effect.

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              Nanomaterials based on DNA.

              The combination of synthetic stable branched DNA and sticky-ended cohesion has led to the development of structural DNA nanotechnology over the past 30 years. The basis of this enterprise is that it is possible to construct novel DNA-based materials by combining these features in a self-assembly protocol. Thus, simple branched molecules lead directly to the construction of polyhedrons, whose edges consist of double helical DNA and whose vertices correspond to the branch points. Stiffer branched motifs can be used to produce self-assembled two-dimensional and three-dimensional periodic lattices of DNA (crystals). DNA has also been used to make a variety of nanomechanical devices, including molecules that change their shapes and molecules that can walk along a DNA sidewalk. Devices have been incorporated into two-dimensional DNA arrangements; sequence-dependent devices are driven by increases in nucleotide pairing at each step in their machine cycles.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Angewandte Chemie
                Angew. Chem.
                Wiley-Blackwell
                00448249
                October 15 2012
                October 15 2012
                : 124
                : 42
                : 10622-10650
                Article
                10.1002/ange.201201114
                75ec0352-238c-4249-a57b-1b2ad66ac08a
                © 2012

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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