Abstract

Molecular motors, such as myosin and kinesin, perform diverse tasks ranging from vesical transport to bulk muscle contraction. Synthetic molecular motors may eventually be harnessed to perform similar tasks in versatile synthetic systems. The most promising type of synthetic molecular motor, the DNA walker, can undergo processive motion but generally exhibits low speeds and virtually no capacity for force generation. However, we recently showed that highly polyvalent DNA motors (HPDMs) can rival biological motors by translocating at micrometer per minute speeds and generating 100+ pN of force. Accordingly, DNA nanotechnology-based designs may hold promise for the creation of synthetic, force-generating nanomotors. However, the dependencies of HPDM speed and force on tunable design parameters are poorly understood and difficult to characterize experimentally. To overcome this challenge, we present RoloSim, an adhesive dynamics software package for fine-grained simulations of HPDM translocation. RoloSim uses biophysical models for DNA duplex formation and dissociation kinetics to explicitly model tens of thousands of molecular scale interactions. These molecular interactions are then used to calculate the nano- and microscale motions of the motor. We use RoloSim to uncover how motor force and speed scale with several tunable motor properties such as motor size and DNA duplex length. Our results support our previously defined hypothesis that force scales linearly with polyvalency. We also demonstrate that HPDMs can be steered with external force, and we provide design parameters for novel HPDM-based molecular sensor and nanomachine designs.

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