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Title:
DNA ORIGAMI BEADS FOR FLUORESCENCE QUANTIFICATION IN MICROFLUIDICS
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2019/149932
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
A method is provided for calibrating a microfluidic system comprising, which method is based on using beads having a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores. Furthermore, methods for determining the level of an antigen using microfluidics calibrated using fluorescent microbeads as provided herein. Also, methods are provided for determining the presence or state of a haematological disease by calibrated a microfluidics system.

Inventors:
SELNIHHIN DENIS (DK)
SIMONSEN BÆK (DK)
PEDERSEN SKOU (DK)
Application Number:
PCT/EP2019/052640
Publication Date:
August 08, 2019
Filing Date:
February 04, 2019
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
UNIV AARHUS (DK)
UNIV DENMARK TECH DTU (DK)
International Classes:
G01N33/53; G01F25/00; G01N33/543; G01N33/58
Foreign References:
US20140057805A12014-02-27
US20140057805A12014-02-27
Other References:
LIN WANG ET AL: "Fluorescence calibration research of microspheres in a microfluidic chip", DESIGN FOR MANUFACTURABILITY THROUGH DESIGN-PROCESS INTEGRATION III, vol. 5718, 22 January 2005 (2005-01-22), 1000 20th St. Bellingham WA 98225-6705 USA, pages 272, XP055575505, ISSN: 0277-786X, ISBN: 978-1-5106-2781-9, DOI: 10.1117/12.591610
MARIO RAAB ET AL: "Using DNA origami nanorulers as traceable distance measurement standards and nanoscopic benchmark structures", SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, vol. 8, no. 1, 29 January 2018 (2018-01-29), XP055575522, DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-19905-x
VIRPI KORPELAINEN ET AL: "DNA origami structures as calibration standards for nanometrology", MEASUREMENT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, IOP, BRISTOL, GB, vol. 28, no. 3, 23 January 2017 (2017-01-23), pages 34001, XP020313856, ISSN: 0957-0233, [retrieved on 20170123], DOI: 10.1088/1361-6501/28/3/034001
INGO H. STEIN ET AL: "Single-Molecule FRET Ruler Based on Rigid DNA Origami Blocks", CHEMPHYSCHEM - A EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS & PHYSICALCHEMISTRY., vol. 12, no. 3, 25 February 2011 (2011-02-25), DE, pages 689 - 695, XP055574486, ISSN: 1439-4235, DOI: 10.1002/cphc.201000781
HANSON CA: "Clinical Laboratory Medicine", 1994, WILLIAMS AND WILKINS, article "Acute leukemias and myelodysplastic syndromes", pages: 939 - 969
JAFFE ES; COSSMAN J: "Manual of Clinical Immunology", 1987, ASM PRESS, article "Immunodiagnosis of lymphoid and mononuclear phagocytic neoplasms", pages: 779 - 790
LANGERAK; VAN DEN BEEMD; WOLVERS-TETTERO ET AL.: "Molecular and flow cytometric analysis of the Vbeta repertoire for clonality assessment in mature TCR alpha beta T-cell proliferations", BLOOD, vol. 98, no. 1, 2001, pages 165 - 173
MARCHI, A. N.; I. SAAEM; B. N. VOGEN; S. BROWN; T. H. LABEAN: "Toward larger DNA origami", NANO LETT, vol. 14, no. 10, 2014, pages 5740 - 5747, XP055347699, DOI: doi:10.1021/nl502626s
MORICE WG; KIMLINGER T; KATZMANN JA ET AL.: "Flow cytometric assessment of TCR-Vbeta expression in the evaluation of peripheral blood involvement by T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders: a comparison with conventional T-cell immunophenotyping and molecular genetic techniques", AM J CLIN PATHOL, vol. 121, no. 3, 2004, pages 373 - 383
ONG, L.L. ET AL.: "Programmable self-assembly of three-dimensional nanostructures from 10,000 unique components", NATURE, vol. 552, 2017, pages 72
ROTHEMUND, P. W.: "Folding DNA to create nanoscale shapes and patterns", NATURE, vol. 440, no. 7082, 2006, pages 297 - 302
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
HØIBERG P/S (DK)
Download PDF:
Claims:
Claims

1. A method of calibrating a microfluidic system comprising:

a. providing at least one bead having a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores; b. measuring the fluorescence of said at least one bead; and

c. calibrating the microfluidic system on the basis of the fluorescence

measurement of b.

thereby obtaining a calibration curve of the microfluidic system. 2. The method according to claim 1 , wherein said microfluidic system is a flow cytometer

3. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores, a single stranded DNA molecule and staple DNA strands, wherein the number of staple DNA strands (Ns) is as in formula I:

Ns = Lss/n,

wherein Lss is the length of the single stranded DNA molecule, and

wherein n is an integer number comprised between 26 and 34.

4. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the single stranded DNA molecule has a length in a range between 1.500-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, preferably between 2000- nucleotides and 68.000- nucleotides, such as between 5.000 and 65.000-nucleotides, for example between 10.000-nucleotides and 60.000-nucleotides, such as between 15.000- nucleotides and 55.000-nucleotides, preferably between 20.000-nucleotides and 55.000-nucleotides.

5. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the single stranded DNA molecule has a length of at least 2.000-nucleotides, such as at least 5.000- nucleotides, such as at least 7.000-nucleotides, such as at least 10.000-nucleotides, such as at least 15.000-nucleotides, such as at least 20.000-nucleotides, such as at least 25.000-nucleotides, such as at least 30.000-nucleotides, such as at least 35.000-nucleotides, such as at least

40.000-nucleotides, such as at least 45.000-nucleotides, such as at least 50.000-nucleotides.

6. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein each staple DNA strand has a length in a range between 12 and 60 nucleotides.

7. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the structure comprises:

a. a positioning domain,

b. a fluorescent domain and/or

c. . a triggering domain;

8. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the

fluorescent domain comprises the predetermined number of fluorophores.

9. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the

fluorophores are attached to the staple DNA strands.

10. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein at least a part of the staple DNA strands comprises sticky ends, wherein the fluorophores are conjugated to a DNA fragment complementary to said sticky ends, and wherein the fluorophores are attached to said sticky ends via said

complementary DNA fragment. 1 1. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the bead comprises a dimeric structure based on DNA origami.

12. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the bead comprises a trimeric structure based on DNA origami.

13. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the structure is a sphere, a barrel, a tube, a hexagon, or a combination thereof.

14. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the structure comprises at least 1 fluorophore, such as at least 50 fluorophores, such as at least 100 fluorophores, such as at least 200 fluorophores, such as at least 300 fluorophores, such as at least 400 fluorophores, such as at least 900

fluorophores, such as at least 1200 fluorophores, such as at least 1500 fluorophores, such as at least 1800 fluorophores, such as at least 2000 fluorophores, such as at least 2700 fluorophores.

15. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein each bead comprises two or more different types of fluorophores or fluorescent domains. 16. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the

fluorophore is selected from a group consisting of Quasar® 566 nm (Cy 3), Quasar® 670 nm (Cy 5), and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC).

17. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein at least two beads, preferably at least three beads, are provided, and wherein each bead comprises a different predetermined number of fluorophores.

18. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, comprising

measuring the fluorescence of the at least two, preferably at least three beads.

19. The method according to any one of the preceding claims, comprising

calibrating the microfluidics system such as a flow cytometer on the basis of the fluorescence measurements of the at least two, preferably at least three beads.

20. A method for determining the level of an antigen in a sample by a microfluidics system comprising

a. calibrating a microfluidics system according to the method of any one of the preceding claims, thereby obtaining a calibration curve; b. providing a sample comprising at least one antigen, wherein said

antigen is attached to a cell or to a vesicle or to a virus-like particle or a viral particle or an extracellular vesicle;

c. contacting the sample with at least one ligand binding molecule coupled to a fluorescent label, wherein said ligand binds the at least one antigen; d. measuring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label; e. scoring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label based on the calibration curve, and

f. determining the level of said at least one antigen in the sample.

21. The method according to claim 20, wherein the level of an antigen is

determined by flow cytometry.

22. The method according to any one of claims 20 and 21 , wherein the sample comprises at least one antigen, such as at least 10 antigens, for example at least 25 antigens, preferably at least 50 antigens, wherein said antigen or said antigens are attached to one or more cells and/or vesicles and/or virus-like particles and/or viral particles and/or exosomes.

23. A method for determining the presence or state of a haematological disease in an individual by a microfluidics system, the method comprising

a. calibrating a microfluidics system according to the method disclosed herein, thereby obtaining a calibration curve;

b. providing a fluid sample from said individual comprising at least one blood cell;

c. contacting the sample with at least one ligand binding molecule coupled to a fluorescent label, wherein said ligand is associated with the presence or state of said haematological disease;

d. measuring the fluorescence of said fluorescent label;

e. scoring the fluorescence of said fluorescent label based on the

calibration curve; and

f. determining the level and/or concentration of said at least one antigen associated with the presence or state of said haematological disease.

24. The method of claim 23, wherein the fluid sample is selected from a group consisting of blood, bone marrow, spinal fluid, bronchoalveolar lavage and serous effusions.

25. The method of any one of claims 23 and 24, comprising the further step of comparing said level and/or concentration of said at least one antigen with a cut-off value, wherein said cut-off value is determined from the concentration range of said at least one antigen in healthy individuals, such as individuals who do not present with a haematological disease, and

wherein a level and/or concentration that is lower or greater than the cut-off value indicates the presence or state of said haematological disease.

26. A kit for calibration of microfluidic instruments comprising a bead having a

structure based on DNA origami wherein said structure comprises a

predetermined number of fluorophores.

27. The kit of claim 26, wherein said bead is as defined in anyone of claims 2 to 14.

28. The kit according to any one of claims 26 and 27, wherein the kit comprises at least two beads, for example at least three beads, such as at least 4 beads, preferably at least 5 beads, wherein each bead comprises a different predetermined number of fluorophores.

Description:
DNA origami beads for fluorescence quantification in microfluidics

Technical field

The present invention discloses beads comprising at least one structure based on DNA origami and fluorophores for use in microfluidics, such as flow cytometry.

Background

The commercial calibrators on the market today that are used to quantify numbers of fluorophores per particle(cell) from the flow cytometric fluorescence intensity are associated with several drawbacks: (a) The current calibrator beads are made of plastic and thus exhibit a high auto-fluorescence corresponding to about 200-2.000 fluorophores per bead (b) The degree of fluorophore-labelling of commercial beads is associated with a large variation, (c) These calibrations are based on thousands of fluorophores per bead (including high auto-fluorescence) and thus the extrapolation into the lower range (50-2.000 fluorophores is associated with very high uncertainty).

DNA-origami-based standards for microscopy have been described in US

20140057805 A1.

Summary

The present invention provides beads comprising a structure based on DNA-origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores for microfluidic applications, such as flow cytometry. The bead has several advantages over the prior art. One advantage is that the bead exhibits no or very little auto- fluorescence. Moreover, the number of fluorophores attached to the structure based on DNA-origami is known and can be precisely controlled so that the bead can be labelled with a distinct number of fluorophores down to as few as one fluorophore. Thus, calibration with the methods of the present disclosure allows quantification of antigens present in a sample at a very low level.

One advantage of the present invention lies in that the origami structure allows fluorescence quantification in microfluidics, where the signal is obtained differently compared to fluorescence microscopy. In microscopy, the object is stationary and thus the fluorophores attached to the object have more excitation exposure and emission time to generate the signal, while in microfluidics, such as flow cytometry, the beads are moving rapidly past the detector, which substantially limits the exposure and detection time. The calibration of flow cytometry systems may require beads with specific number of fluorophores, up to 1500-3000 fluorophores. One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method of calibrating a microfluidics system comprising:

a. providing at least one bead having a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores; b. measuring the fluorescence of said at least one bead; and

c. calibrating the microfluidics system on the basis of the fluorescence

measurement of b.

thereby obtaining a calibration curve of the microfluidics system

Calibration of a microfluidics systems, such as flow cytometry setups, using calibration beads as defined herein allows precise biochemical analysis of small biological particles e.g. extracellular vesicles, viruses and bacteria. Thus, the provided methods for calibrating microfluidics systems can advantageously be used in academic, industrial as well as for clinical analyses, including diagnostic methods based on microfluidics, such as flow cytometry.

Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method for determining the level of an antigen in a sample by a microfluidics system comprising

a. calibrating a microfluidics system according to the method of any one of the preceding claims, thereby obtaining a calibration curve; b. providing a sample comprising at least one antigen, wherein said

antigen is attached to a cell or to a vesicle or to a virus-like particle or a viral particle or to an extracellular vesicle;

c. contacting the sample with at least one ligand binding molecule coupled to a fluorescent label, wherein said ligand binds the at least one antigen; d. measuring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label;

e. scoring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label based on the

calibration curve, and

f. determining the level of said at least one antigen in the sample. Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method for determining the presence or state of a haematological disease in an individual by a microfluidics system, such as a flow cytometry system, the method comprising

a. calibrating a microfluidics system according to the method disclosed herein, thereby obtaining a calibration curve;

b. providing a blood sample from said individual comprising at least one blood cell;

c. contacting the sample with at least one ligand binding molecule coupled to a fluorescent label, wherein said ligand is associated with the presence or state of said haematological disease;

d. measuring the fluorescence of said fluorescent label;

e. scoring the fluorescence of said fluorescent label based on the calibration curve; and

f. determining the level and/or concentration of said at least one antigen associated with the presence or state of said haematological disease.

Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to a kit for calibration of microfluidic instruments comprising a bead having a structure based on DNA origami wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores.

Description of drawings

Figure 1. Example of a possible design of flow cytometry calibration bead. A: Side view of a DNA-based monomer bead. B: Front view of monomer. C: Dimerization of a whole particle. D: Dimer bead. E: TEM characterization of dimer beads. TEM images are 200 * 200 nm. F: Positioning of fluorophores in a dimer bead. G: Flow cytometry data and analysis of dimer beads labelled with 0, 120 and 242 Cy5 molecules by Cytoflex flow cytometry system. H: Alternative positioning of the fluorophores on outer surface of the bead.

Figure 2. Proposition of a possible bead design based on 51 kb scaffold. A. Front view of number 8 shaped bead B. Zoom in on fluorophore strand attachment to a complementary toehold protruding from the structure. Detailed description

Definitions

The term“structure based on a DNA origami” as used herein refers to a DNA origami formed from a scaffold DNA strand and shorter DNA segments, also called staple strands, which form a predetermined structure of the scaffold DNA strand. The scaffold DNA strand is usually a long single-stranded DNA molecule. The length of the scaffold DNA strand depends on the system used for its production. Scaffold DNA strands of approximately 7.000 nucleotides may be produced using for example M13mp18 phage. Scaffold DNA strands of approximately 50.000 nucleotides may be produced using for example a A/M13 hybrid virus as described in Marchi et al. (2014). The structure based on a DNA strand can comprise further components such as dyes, plasmonic structures, biological molecules such as proteins, enzymes, nanoparticles, and small molecules such as biotin. Alternatively, the structure based on a DNA origami can also be constructed solely from short DNA segments, as recently described by Ong et al.

(2017). Constructing a structure based on a DNA origami solely from short DNA segments is also possible for large structures, such as structures in the gigadalton range.

The term“DNA” as used herein, is understood to mean not only strands of

deoxyribonucleic acid, but also analogous structures, such as strands of ribonucleic acids (RNA), peptide nucleic acid (PNA), as well as hybrid structures.

The term“shorter DNA segments” as used herein refers to the nucleotide molecules which are also referred to as“staple strands” or“staple DNA strands” and which have a sequence complementary to a sequence of the scaffold DNA strand or another shorter DNA segment. Furthermore, said shorter DNA segments can be used to fold the long DNA strand into the predetermined structure. Alternatively, the shorter DNA segments can be those which hybridize with the DNA scaffold strand of the DNA origami in predetermined regions. The shorter DNA segments may comprise a sequence that does not hybridize to the DNA scaffold strand, called“sticky end” herein, which can be used for decorating the structure with fluorophores. The shorter DNA segments can also be used to bind/stick individual DNA origami structures together into large DNA origami oligomers in a controllable manner. The term“calibration” is understood here to mean quantifying a measured variable on the basis of one or more reference samples or determining the properties of an apparatus, such as the sensitivity and resolution. For example, the methods disclosed herein may be used for calibration of a flow cytometer.

Structure based on DNA origami

In one aspect the present disclosure relates to a method of calibrating a microfluidics system, such as a flow cytometer, comprising providing at least one bead having a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores.

The structure based on DNA origami usually comprises a single stranded DNA molecule, also called DNA scaffold strand, which is folded into a predetermined structure with the help of a plurality of staple strands. Each staple strand hybridizes to specific parts of sequence on the single stranded DNA molecule thereby determining how the single stranded DNA molecule folds.

Depending on the length of the DNA scaffold strand, a certain number of staple DNA strands will be required for folding the scaffold strand into the predesigned structure.

Thus, in one specific embodiment the structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores, a single stranded DNA molecule and staple DNA strands, wherein the number of staple DNA strands (Ns) is as in the formula below:

Ns = Lss/n,

wherein Lss is the length of the single stranded DNA molecule, and

wherein n is an integer number comprised between 26 and 34.

In another specific embodiment, the structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores, a single stranded DNA molecule and staple DNA strands, wherein the number of staple DNA strands (Ns) is as in the formula below:

Ns = Lss/n,

wherein Lss is the length of the single stranded DNA molecule, and

wherein n is an integer number comprised between 28 and 32. However, the present invention is not limited to embodiments meeting the above equation. Indeed, it is possible to produce many different DNA origami structures, which do not follow this equation.

The length of the staple DNA strands may differ from one staple DNA to the other. The minimum length is a length that allows the staple DNA strand to be stable at room temperature.

In one embodiment, the length of the staple DNA strands is in the range between 12 and 60 nucleotides, preferably between 15 and 50 nucleotides.

Thus, in one embodiment the present disclosure relates to a method of calibrating a flow cytometer comprising providing at least one bead having a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores, a single stranded DNA molecule and staple DNA strands.

The length of the single stranded DNA molecule is important for the size of the bead as well as for the number of fluorophores that the bead can accommodate.

Thus, the single stranded DNA molecule or DNA scaffold strand may have a length in a range between 1.500-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 2.000- nucleotides and 68.000-nucleotides, such as between 5.000-nucleotides and 65.000- nucleotides, for example between 10.000-nucleotides and 60.000-nucleotides, such as between 15.000-nucleotides and 55.000-nucleotides, preferably between 20.000- nucleotides and 55.000-nucleotides, such as between 50.000 and 52.000-nucleotides. Thus, the single stranded DNA molecule or DNA scaffold strand may have a length of 51.466-nucleotides.

The single stranded DNA molecule may have a length in a range between 5.000- nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, for example between 7.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 10.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, preferably between 13.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 15.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, for example between 18.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 20.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, preferably between 23.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 25.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, for example between 28.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 30.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, preferably between 33.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 35.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, for example between 38.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 40.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, preferably between 43.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 45.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, for example between 48.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 50.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, preferably between 53.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 55.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, for example between 58.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 60.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, preferably between 63.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, such as between 65.000-nucleotides and 70.000-nucleotides, for example between 5.000-nucleotides and 65.000-nucleotides, such as between 5.000-nucleotides and 60.000-nucleotides, preferably between 5.000-nucleotides and 55.000-nucleotides, such as between 5.000- nucleotides and 50.000-nucleotides, for example between 5.000-nucleotides and 45.000-nucleotides, such as between 5.000-nucleotides and 40.000-nucleotides, preferably between 5.000-nucleotides and 35.000-nucleotides, such as between 5.000- nucleotides and 30.000-nucleotides, for example between 5.000-nucleotides and 25.000-nucleotides, such as between 5.000-nucleotides and 20.000-nucleotides, preferably between 5.000-nucleotides and 15.000-nucleotides, such as between 5.000- nucleotides and 10.000-nucleotides, for example between 5.000-nucleotides and 7.000-nucleotides.

The single stranded DNA molecule may have a length of at least 5.000-nucleotides, for example at least 7.000-nucleotides, preferably at least 10.000-nucleotides, such as at least 15.000-nucleotides, for example at least 20.000-nucleotides, preferably at least 25.000-nucleotides, such as at least 30.000-nucleotides, for example at least 35.000- nucleotides, preferably at least 40.000-nucleotides, such as at least 45.000- nucleotides, for example at least 50.000-nucleotides.

In one embodiment the single stranded DNA molecule may be produced using a phage and has a length in a range between 5.000-nucleotides and 10.000 nucleotides.

In one embodiment the single stranded DNA molecule may be produced using a hybrid virus and has a length in a range between 5.000-nucleotides and 55.000 nucleotides. It may be beneficial to produce long single stranded DNA molecules, such as single stranded DNA molecules having a length of at least 30.000-nucleotides as these long molecules can carry a higher number of fluorophores compared to single stranded DNA molecules having a length in the range of between 5.000 and 10.000-nucleotides, such as at the most 30.000-nucleotides.

For example, a bead comprising a single stranded DNA molecule of 7.000 to 12.000- nucleotides may accommodate 1 to 200 fluorophores; a bead comprising a single stranded DNA molecule of 40.000 to 50.000-nucleotides may accommodate 1 to 1500 fluorophores.

Another way to increase the number of fluorophores comprised in a bead is the production of dimeric, such as trimeric structures through hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bond interactions.

Thus, in one embodiment the bead comprises a dimeric structure based on DNA origami. In another embodiment, the bead comprises a trimeric structure based on DNA origami. However, it is also possible to produce larger oligomer structures such as tetrameric, pentameric, hexameric, heptameric and/or larger multiple oligomeric structures.

The structure based on DNA origami may have any shape and it may be flat or curved. A certain geometry may be preferred over other geometries. For example a geometry that hides the fluorophores inside the structure to prevent undesired oligomerization of structures through possible hydrophobic interactions between the fluorophores may be preferred. Thus, in one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami may be a sphere, an hexagon, a barrel, a tube or a combination of these structures. In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami may be a sphere.

In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami may be a barrel or a tube.

In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami may be an hexagon. In one embodiment, the structure based on DNA origami may be a combination of the proposed geometrical structures.

In one embodiment, the structure based on DNA origami comprises a positioning domain ,a fluorescent domain and/or triggering domain

A positioning domain is a domain where a fluorophore is placed on the structure. It can be one of the staple strands that are fully complementary to the scaffold strand or it can have a single stranded overhang sequence that is not complementary to scaffold strand. The overhang is used to attach a fluorophore labelled oligo that is

complementary to the overhang.

The fluorescent domain is the domain where the fluorophores are attached. Thus, the fluorescent domain comprises the predetermined number of fluorophores. In addition, each bead may comprise more than one different type of fluorophore, for example, each bead may comprise two or more different fluorophores or fluorescent domains, such as 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 or 10 different fluorophores or fluorescent domains. In a preferred embodiment, the beads comprises 1-4 different fluorophores or fluorescent domain.

In another embodiment, the DNA based origami structure comprises a triggering domain.

The triggering domain is a domain where a different type of fluorophore or nanoparticle can be attached. The nanoparticle e.g. gold or silver nanoparticle can efficiently spread light. Thereby, these fluorophores or nanoparticles in the triggering domain can be used to trigger detection of a calibration bead.

An advantage of using beads comprising a structure based on DNA origami is that a precise and known number of fluorophores can be attached on the structure, and therefore accurate calibration of the measuring instrument, in this case of the flow cytometer, is possible. In one embodiment the fluorescent domain comprises sticky ends and the fluorophores are conjugated to a DNA fragment complementary to said sticky ends, so that the fluorophores are attached to said sticky ends via said complementary DNA fragment.

A bead of the present disclosure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores. Based on the length and the design of the structure based on DNA origami, the bead may comprise a certain maximum number of fluorophores.

In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises between 1 and 50 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 80 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 100 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 150 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 200 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 300 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 400 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 500 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 600 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 700 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 800 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 900 fluorophores, preferably at the most 1000 fluorophores, such as at the most 1200 fluorophores, such as at the most 1500 fluorophores, such as at the most 1800 fluorophores, such as at the most 2000 fluorophores, such as at the most 2200 fluorophores, such as at the most 2500 fluorophores, such as at the most 2700 fluorophores, such as at the most 3000 fluorophores.

In one embodiment the bead comprises a dimeric or trimeric structure based on DNA origami, and each monomer comprises between 1 and 1800 fluorophores.

In one embodiment the bead comprises a monomeric structure based on DNA origami and said structure comprises between 1 and 900 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 1500 fluorophores, preferably between 1 and 1800 fluorophores, such as between 1 and 2700 fluorophores, preferably at the most 3000 fluorophores.

In one embodiment the bead comprises a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a single stranded DNA molecule of at least 30.000- nucleotides and comprising between 1 and 1000 fluorophores. In one embodiment the bead comprises a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a single stranded DNA molecule of at least 50.000- nucleotides and comprising between 1 and 1800 fluorophores.

Any fluorophore suitable for flow cytometry can be used. However, the preferred fluorophores are selected from small organic molecules.

In one embodiment, the small organic molecules are smaller than 5 nm.

In one embodiment, the fluorophore is selected from a group consisting of Quasar® 566 nm (Cy 3), Quasar® 670 nm (Cy 5), and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC).

In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises 120 fluorophores, for example 120 Cy5 fluorescence molecules.

In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises 242 fluorophores, for example 242 Cy5 fluorescence molecules.

Suitable fluorophores are known to the skilled person and include Alexa Fluor ® 488, Alexa Fluor ® 532, Alexa Fluor ® 647, ATTO 488 and ATTO 532 and 5/6 carboxy- tetramethyl rhodamine (TMR), 6-carboxyfluorescein (6-FAM), Alexa Fluor® 350, DY- 415, ATTO 425, ATTO 465, Bodipy ® FL, fluorescein isothiocyanate, Oregon Green ® 488, Oregon Green ® 514, Rhodamine Green™, 5’-Tetrachloro-Fluorescein, ATTO 520, 6-carboxy-4',5'-dichloro-2',7'-dimethoxyfluoresceine, Yakima Yellow™ dyes, Bodipy ® 530/550, hexachloro-fluorescein, Alexa Fluor ® 555, DY-549, Bodipy ® TMR-X, cyanine phosphoramidites (cyanine 3, cyanine 3.5, cyanine 5, cyanine 5.5), ATTO 550, Rhodamine Red™, ATTO 565, Carboxy-X-Rhodamine, Texas Red (Sulforhodamine 101 acid chloride), LightCyclei^ Red 610, ATTO 594, DY-480-XL, DY-610, ATTO 610, LightCycler ® Red 640, Bodipy 630/650, ATTO 633, Bodipy 650/665, ATTO 647N, DY- 649, LightCycler ® Red 670, ATTO 680, LightCyclei^ Red 705, DY-682, ATTO 700, ATTO 740, DY-782, IRD 700 and IRD 800, CAL Fluoi^ Gold 540 nm, CAL Fluoi^ Gold 522 nm, CAL Fluor ® Gold 544 nm , CAL Fluor ® Orange 560 nm, CAL Fluor ® Orange 538 nm, CAL Fluor ® Orange 559 nm, CAL Fluor ® Red 590 nm, CAL Fluor ® Red 569 nm, CAL Fluoi^ Red 591 nm, CAL Fluoi^ Red 610 nm, CAL Fluoi^ Red 590 nm, CAL Fluor ® Red 610 nm, CAL Fluor® Red 635 nm, Quasar ® 570 nm, Quasar ® 548 nm, Quasa ® 566 nm (Cy 3), Quasa ® 670 nm, Quasar ® 647 nm, Quasa ® 670 nm (Cy 5), Quasa ® 705 nm, Quasa ® 690 nm, Quasa ® 705 nm (Cy 5.5), Pulsa ® 650 Dyes, SuperRox ® Dyes. In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises a DNA scaffold of a length between 50.000 and 52.000-nucleotides, for example of a length of 51.466- nucleotides; a number of staple strands between 1000 and 2000, for example between 1500 and 1600, preferably 1550; and between 50 and 1800 fluorophores. In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises a DNA scaffold of a length between 50.000 and 52.000-nucleotides, for example of a length of 51.466- nucleotides; a number of staple strands between 1000 and 2000, for example between 1500 and 1600, preferably 1550; and between 50 and 900 fluorophores. In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises a DNA scaffold of a length between 50.000 and 52.000-nucleotides, for example of a length of 51.466- nucleotides; a number of staple strands between 1000 and 2000, for example between 1500 and 1600, preferably 1550; and between 50 and 1800 fluorophores, for example 80 fluorophores, for example 160 fluorophores, such as 900 fluorophores, such as 1800 fluorophores.

In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises a DNA scaffold of a length between 50.000 and 52.000-nucleotides, for example of a length of 51.466- nucleotides; a number of staple strands between 1000 and 2000, for example between 1500 and 1600, preferably 1550; and 80 fluorophores, for example 80 Cy5

fluorescence molecules.

In one embodiment the structure based on DNA origami comprises a DNA scaffold of a length between 50.000 and 52.000-nucleotides, for example of a length of 51.466- nucleotides; a number of staple strands between 1000 and 2000, for example between 1500 and 1600, preferably 1550; and 160 fluorophores, for example 160 Cy5 fluorescence molecules. Method of calibrating a microfluidics system

Microfluidic systems involves setups with very small volumes of fluids, and microfluidic devices utilises the principles of microfluidics and can thereby exploit the physical and chemical properties of liquids and gases at the microscale. Many operations can be executed at the same time thanks to their compact size and the shortened experiment time while they still offer an excellent data quality.

The current invention relates to methods for using DNA origami in calibration of a microfluidics system.

So, one aspect the present disclosure relates to a method of calibrating a microfluidic device comprising:

a. providing at least one bead having a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores; b. measuring the fluorescence of said at least one bead; and

c. calibrating the microfluidic device on the basis of the fluorescence

measurement of b.

thereby obtaining a calibration curve of the microfluidic device.

Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method for determining the level of an antigen in a sample by a microfluidic technology comprising

a. calibrating a microfluidic device according to the method disclosed

herein, thereby obtaining a calibration curve;

b. providing a sample comprising at least one antigen, wherein said

antigen is attached to a cell or to a vesicle or to a virus-like particle or a viral particle or to an extracellular vesicle;

c. contacting the sample with at least one ligand binding molecule coupled to a fluorescent label, wherein said ligand binds the at least one antigen; d. measuring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label;

e. scoring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label based on the

calibration curve, and

f. determining the level of said at least one antigen in the sample.

In a preferred embodiment, the microfluidic system is a flow cytometer system, where structures based on DNA origami, wherein said structures comprise a predetermined number of fluorophores, are used for calibration; cf. herein below. However, any specific embodiment described herein below in respect of flow cytometer systems can also be applied to microfluidic systems in general.

Method of calibrating a flow cytometer

In one aspect the present disclosure relates to a method of calibrating a flow cytometer comprising:

a. providing at least one bead having a structure based on DNA origami, wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores; b. measuring the fluorescence of said at least one bead; and

c. calibrating the flow cytometer on the basis of the fluorescence

measurement of b.

In one embodiment the method of calibrating a flow cytometer comprises providing a series of beads each comprising a different predetermined number of fluorophores. For example at least two beads may be provided, such as at least three beads, preferably at least four beads, even more preferably at least five beads may be provided, each bead comprising a different predetermined number of fluorophores.

For example, a series of 2 beads comprising 50 and 100 fluorophores, respectively, may be provided; preferably a series of 3 beads comprising 50, 100, 200 fluorophores, respectively, may be provided; preferably a series of 4 beads comprising 50, 100, 200 and 500 fluorophores, respectively, may be provided; preferably a series of 5 beads comprising 50, 100, 200, 500 and 1000 fluorophores, respectively, may be provided; for example a series of 6 beads comprising 50, 100, 200, 500, 1000 and 1500 fluorophores, respectively, may be provided.

Thus, the fluorescence of each bead will be measured according to step b. of the method above.

Although it is possible to calibrate a flow cytometer with the methods of the present disclosure by using only two beads having a structure based on DNA origami as disclosed herein, it is preferable to use more than two beads. In fact, the precision of the calibration will increase with the number of beads used. When the method of calibrating a flow cytometer comprises providing a series of beads each comprising a different predetermined number of fluorophores, it may be beneficial that at least one bead comprises a number of fluorophores as close as possible to the sensitivity of the method.

For example, a first bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 1 and 50; a second bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 51 and 100; a third bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 101 and 150; a fourth bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 151 and 300; a fifth bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 301 and 500. If a series of beads comprising a number of fluorophores as in this example are used, the data for a higher number of fluorophores may easily be extrapolated.

For example, a first bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 1 and 50; a second bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 51 and 100; a third bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 101 and 300; a fourth bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 301 and 750; a fifth bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 751 and 1500; a sixth bead may comprise a number of fluorophores between 1501 and 2700.

In one embodiment the method of calibrating a flow cytometer comprises measuring the fluorescence of the at least two beads provided, such as of the at least three beads provided, preferably of the at least four beads provided, even more preferably of the at least five beads provided.

In one embodiment the method of calibrating a flow cytometer comprises calibrating the flow cytometer on the basis of the fluorescence measurements of the at least two beads provided, such as of the at least three beads provided, preferably of the at least four beads provided, even more preferably of the at least five beads provided.

The calibration of a flow cytometer according to the methods disclosed herein allows precise determination of the sensitivity of the instrument and generation of a calibration curve. The calibration curve allow us to correlate fluorescence intensity with the number of fluorescent molecules (fluorophores) on the entity of interest for a given fluorophore. One advantage of the calibration method of the present disclosure is that, thanks to the use of beads comprising a structure based on DNA origami and a predetermined number of fluorophores, fluorescence can be determined with precision and a linear correlation between fluorescence and number of fluorophores is determined, allowing the establishment of a zero-point. The zero-point is a reference value, which functions as a measurement of the background fluorescence e.g. the auto-fluorescence of the utilized buffer.

Thanks to this zero-point, measurements performed with different flow cytometer systems can be compared. The zero-point, together with the calibration curve, also allows precise extrapolation of values based on the fluorescence signal.

Method for determining the level of an antigen

The calibration of a flow cytometer setup performed using calibration beads as described herein will allow precise biochemical analysis of small biological particles e.g. extracellular vesicles, viruses and bacteria. Such analyses can be applied in academic, industrial as well as for clinical settings

Extracellular vesicles includes exosomes and microvesicles and are secreted by almost all cells. Extracellular vesicles are generally difficult to characterize at single particle level because of their small size. Exosomes are the smallest entities with a size of 30-150 nm. These are formed by inward budding of the endosomal membrane during maturation of large multivesicular endosomes. Fusion of multivesicular endosomes with the plasma membrane results in the release of exosomes into the extracellular space. Microvesicles are larger with a size of 50-500 nm. These are released into the extracellular space by outward budding directly from the plasma membrane. Extracellular vesicle cargo is very heterogeneous and can include nucleic acids, proteins and lipids. These extracellular vesicles play an important role mediating intercellular communication. The surface proteins embedded in these exosomes can reveal their subcellular origin, producer and recipient cell type. Characterization of these vesicles at single particle level will help to understand the intercellular communication code but also allow diagnosing e.g. tumor development and progression. One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method for determining the level of an antigen in a sample by a microfluidic system, such as flow cytometry comprising

a. calibrating said microfluidic system, such as flow cytometer according to the method disclosed herein, thereby obtaining a calibration curve; b. providing a sample comprising at least one antigen, wherein said

antigen is attached to a cell or to a vesicle or to a virus-like particle or a viral particle or an exosome;

c. contacting the sample with at least one ligand binding molecule coupled to a fluorescent label, wherein said ligand binds the at least one antigen; d. measuring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label;

e. scoring the fluorescence of said fluorescence label based on the

calibration curve, and

f. determining the level of said at least one antigen in the sample. In one embodiment, the method for determining the level of an antigen in a sample by flow cytometry as disclosed herein can detect as few as one single antigen in the sample provided.

In one embodiment, the sample comprises at least one antigen, such as at least 10 antigens, for example at least 25 antigens, preferably at least 50 antigens, wherein said antigen or said antigens are attached to one or more cells and/or vesicles and/or virus- like particles and/or viral particles and/or exosomes.

Method for diagnosis of an haematological disease

One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method for determining the presence or state of a haematological disease in an individual by a microfluidic system, such as flow cytometry, the method comprising

a. calibrating said microfluidic system, such as flow cytometer according to the method disclosed herein, thereby obtaining a calibration curve;

b. providing a fluid sample from said individual comprising at least one blood cell; c. contacting the sample with at least one ligand binding molecule coupled to a fluorescent label, wherein said ligand is associated with the presence or state of said haematological disease;

d. measuring the fluorescence of said fluorescent label; e. scoring the fluorescence of said fluorescent label based on the calibration curve; and

f. determining the level and/or concentration of said at least one antigen

associated with the presence or state of said haematological disease.

In one embodiment, the fluid is selected from a group consisting of blood, bone marrow, spinal fluid, bronchoalveolar lavage and serous effusions.

In one embodiment, the individual is human.

In one embodiment the method for diagnosis of a haematological disease by flow cytometry further comprises a step of comparing said level and/or concentration of said at least one antigen on the blood cell with a cut-off value,

wherein said cut-off value is determined from the concentration range of said at least one antigen in healthy individuals, such as individuals who do not present with a haematological disease, and

wherein a level and/or concentration that is lower or greater than the cut-off

value indicates the presence or absence of said haematological disease. The fluid sample can be a blood sample, and the blood sample can be full blood, but more preferably plasma, serum, cell-free or a sample comprising at least one blood cell or blood cell derived microvesicle.

For example the methods disclosed herein can be used for diagnosis of leukemia or lymphoma by performing an immunophenotyping of a fluid sample, such as by determining the level of certain markers expressed on cells of any of the above mentioned fluid samples.

For example the following leukemias and lymphomas may be diagnosed using the methods disclosed herein: acute myelogenous leukemia (or acute myeloid leukemia), acute lymphoblastic leukemia, chronic lymphocytic or myelocytic leukemias, B-cell and T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, erythroleukemia (RBC leukemia), megaloblastic leukemia (platelets), and multiple myeloma. In one embodiment, the level of any one of the following antigens may be determined: ZAP-70, HLA-DR, TdT, CD34, CD38, CD1 17, CD19, CD20, CD22, CD79a, immunoglobulin heavy (gamma, alpha, mu or delta) and light chains (kappa or lambda), CD10 (pre-B cell), CD2, CD3, CD5, CD7, CD4, CD8, MPO

(myeloperoxidase), CD11 , CD13, CD15, CD16b, CD33, CD66, CD1 1 b, CD16, CD56, CD31 , CD36, CD41 , CD42, CD61 , CD235a, CD14, CD33, CD64, CD68, CD1 1c, and CD103. The skilled person will know which antigens are expressed by the different types of blood cells and which levels are expected in an individual affected by a leukemia or lymphoma; see for example Morice et al. 2004; Jaffe 1987; Hanson et al.

1999; Langerak et al. 2001.

Kit for calibration of flow cytometry instruments

One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a kit for calibration of microfluidic instruments, such as flow cytometry instruments comprising at least one bead having a structure based on DNA origami wherein said structure comprises a predetermined number of fluorophores.

In one embodiment of the present disclosure, the at least one bead is as disclosed herein in the section“Structure based on DNA origami”.

In one embodiment of the present disclosure, the kit comprises at least two beads, for example at least three beads, such as at least 4 beads, preferably at least 5 beads, wherein each bead comprises a different predetermined number of fluorophores, as described in the section“Structure based on DNA origami”.

Examples

Example 1. Hexagonal double barrel.

Assembly of the calibration beads

Calibration beads are self-assembled into designed structure a circular single stranded scaffold strand (8064 bp) and 21 1 shorter single-stranded staple DNA strands. The scaffold strand is bought from Tilibit nanosystems and staple strands are produced chemically by Integrated DNA technologies. Staples strands bind to scaffold strand parts of the scaffold strand making it fold into a predesigned structure as described in (Rothemund 2006). In the present case, the designed bead is assembled into a hexagonally shaped barrel (Figure 1A and B) that has a self-complementary side (Figure 1A) that governs assembly of a homodimer structure (Figure 1 C) resulting in a longer hexagonal barrel with (Figure 1 D and E). The structure has a size of approximately 42 * 45 * 70 nm. The size of transmission electron micrographs is 200 * 200 nm.

Some of the staple strands are labelled with fluorophores (Figure 1 F). To avoid oligomerization the structure is designed with fluorophores residing inside the barrel thus fluorophores are shielded from the environment by the structure and preventing undesired oligomerization. Analysis of beads with 0, 120 and 242 Cy5 fluorophores using Cytoflex (Beckman Coulter) flow cytometry system (Figure 1 G) shows that structures not labelled with any fluorophores do not exhibit any significant fluorescence compared with buffer alone. Addition of 120 and 242 Cy5 resulted in incremental increase in fluorescence intensity.

Example 2. Eight-shaped DNA origami structure

Assembly of the calibration beads

Calibration beads are self-assembled into designed structure from a circular single- stranded DNA scaffold strand (51.466 bp) and 1550 shorter single-stranded staple DNA strands. The scaffold strand is produced biologically as described in (Marchi, Saaem et al. 2014) while staple strands are produced chemically. Staple strands bind to complementary parts of the scaffold strand making it fold into a predesigned structure as described in (Rothemund 2006).

In the present case, the designed bead is assembled into two hexagonally shaped structures forming an 8 number (Figure 2A). The structure had a size of approximately 128 * 220 * 60 nm.

Alternative way of labelling structures: some of the staple strands contain additional DNA sequences without complementarity to the scaffold strand, so called sticky ends which serve as a docking sequence for fluorophore labelled DNA strands. Hence, fluorophore labelled strands have a complementary sequence to sticky ends and are labelled with a fluorophore (Figure 2B).

Fluorophores attachment

Fluorophore labelled strands are produced by chemically attaching a fluorophore to a DNA strand and subsequently purifying the conjugate using high pressure liquid chromatography. The number of strands in the structure containing sticky ends determines the number of annealed fluorophore strands which equals the number of fluorophores on a bead and can range from 1 to 4000. Labelled fluorophore strands dock onto complementary sticky ends that point into the structure (Figure 2B). This way the structure screens the fluorophores from the environment and prevents undesired oligomerization of several beads through hydrophobic fluorophore interactions, which would lead to oligomers with non-defined number of fluorophores.

Alternatively, instead of sticky ends the strands in the structure can be conjugated directly to a fluorophore of interest.

Assembly of the structure.

Design and assembly of DNA origami calibration beads. CadNano software

(http://cadnano.org/) was used for generation of staple strand sequences AutoCAD Maya (http://www.autodesk.com/) was used for evaluation of the 3D shape and designing shape complementary domain for dimerization into fully assembled bead.

The self-assembly of DNA origami structures was performed by mixing Single-stranded Scaffold DNA (p8064, tilibit nanosystems) with 10x excess of staple strands in 100 pL TAE/Mg2+ buffer (40 mM Trisacetate, 1 mM EDTA, pH = 8.3, 12 mM Mg2+). Annealing of staple strands was done using a following ramp: 65°C for 5 min, followed by a temperature rapid decrease to 50°C and slow cooling for 200min for each 1 °C from 50- 43°C then rapid cooling to 20°C. In structures assembled with fluorophores, fluorophore strands were conjugated with a fluorophore in 5’end. Assembled structures were purified from excess of staple strands gel extraction. Purified structures were characterized by transmission electron microscopy and used directly for flow cytometry analysis.

Results

A Cytoflex (Beckman Coulter) cytometry system was used to test calibration beads assembled according to the description of example 1 above and labelled with none,

120 and 242 Cy5 fluorescence molecules. Cytoflex system showed a significant difference between the obtained fluorescence signal coming from unlabelled, labelled with 120 Cy5 fluorescence molecules and labelled with 242 Cy5 fluorescence molecules, respectively. Remarkably, the unlabeled calibration beads do not have any autofluorescence and the obtained fluorescence signal is equal to the signal of buffer. This allows to define a“0” point as a real point without any need for down extrapolation of the dataset. This allows the making of a calibration curve for flow cytometry systems that enables a precise quantification of flow cytometry output signals of low abundant antigens.

Bigger beads compared to the one of Example 1 can be assembled either by using a longer scaffold strand as described in Example 2 or by organizing the beads in dimers or trimers through hydrophobic interactions. This allows each bead to accommodate a larger number of fluorophores, such as up to 1500, 1800, 2000, 2500, 2700

fluorophores, and so a more diverse pool of beads to choose from for the calibration.

The quality of the synthesized beads is evaluated by cryo-TEM and agarose gel.

Bibliography

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Jaffe ES, Cossman J: Immunodiagnosis of lymphoid and mononuclear phagocytic neoplasms. In Manual of Clinical Immunology. Third edition. Edited by NR Rose, H Friedman, JL Fahey. ASM Press. 1987, pp 779-790.

Langerak, van Den Beemd, Wolvers-Tettero, et al: Molecular and flow cytometric analysis of the Vbeta repertoire for clonality assessment in mature TCR alpha beta T- cell proliferations. Blood 2001 ;98(1 ): 165-173.

Marchi, A. N., I. Saaem, B. N. Vogen, S. Brown and T. H. LaBean (2014). "Toward larger DNA origami." Nano Lett 14(10): 5740-5747.

Morice WG, Kimlinger T, Katzmann JA, et al: Flow cytometric assessment of TCR-V- beta expression in the evaluation of peripheral blood involvement by T-cell

lymphoproliferative disorders: a comparison with conventional T-cell

immunophenotyping and molecular genetic techniques. Am J Clin Pathol

2004;121 (3):373-383.

Ong, L.L., et al. 2017, Programmable self-assembly of three-dimensional

nanostructures from 10,000 unique components. Nature 552: p. 72.

Rothemund, P. W. (2006). Folding DNA to create nanoscale shapes and patterns. Nature 440(7082): 297-302. Tables

Table 1. An example of a DNA origami scaffold sequence (SEQ ID NO: 1 )

GGCAATGACCTGATAGCCTTTGTAGATCTCTCAAAAATAGCTACCCTCTCCGGCATTAAT TTATC

AGCTAGAACGGTTGAATATCATATTGATGGTGATTTGACTGTCTCCGGCCTTTCTCA CCCTTTTG

AAT CTTT ACCT AC AC ATT ACT C AGGC ATTGC ATTT AAAAT AT AT G AGGGTT CT AAAAATTTTT ATCC

TTGCGTTGAAATAAAGGCTTCTCCCGCAAAAGTATTACAGGGTCATAATGTTTTTGG TACAACCG

ATTTAGCTTTATGCTCTGAGGCTTTATTGCTTAATTTTGCTAATTCTTTGCCTTGCC TGTATGATTT

ATTGGATGTTAATGCTACTACTATTAGTAGAATTGATGCCACCTTTTCAGCTCGCGC CCCAAATG

AAAATATAGCTAAACAGGTTATTGACCATTTGCGAAATGTATCTAATGGTCAAACTA AATCTACTC

GTTCGCAGAATT GGGAAT CAACT GTTATATGGAAT GAAACTTCCAGACACCGTACTTTAGTTGCA

TATTTAAAACATGTTGAGCTACAGCATTATATTCAGCAATTAAGCTCTAAGCCATCC GCAAAAATG

ACCTCTTATCAAAAGGAGCAATTAAAGGTACTCTCTAATCCTGACCTGTTGGAGTTT GCTTCCGG

TCTGGTTCGCTTTGAAGCTCGAATTAAAACGCGATATTTGAAGTCTTTCGGGCTTCC TCTTAATC

TTTTTGATGCAATCCGCTTTGCTTCTGACTATAATAGTCAGGGTAAAGACCTGATTT TTGATTTAT

GGT CATT CTCGTTTT CT GAACT GTTTAAAGCATTT GAGGGGGATT CAAT GAATATTTAT GACGATT

CCGCAGTATTGGACGCTATCCAGTCTAAACATTTTACTATTACCCCCTCTGGCAAAA CTTCTTTT

GCAAAAGCCTCTCGCTATTTTGGTTTTTATCGTCGTCTGGTAAACGAGGGTTATGAT AGTGTTGC

TCTTACTATGCCTCGTAATTCCTTTTGGCGTTATGTATCTGCATTAGTTGAATGTGG TATTCCTAA

AT CT CAACT GAT G AAT CTTT CT ACCT GT AAT AAT GTT GTT CCGTT AGTT CGTTTT ATT AACGT AG A

TTTTTCTTCCCAACGTCCTGACTGGTATAATGAGCCAGTTCTTAAAATCGCATAAGG TAATTCACA

AT GATTAAAGTT GAAATTAAACCAT CT CAAGCCCAATTTACTACTCGTT CTGGT GTTT CT CGT CAG

GGCAAGCCTTATTCACTGAATGAGCAGCTTTGTTACGTTGATTTGGGTAATGAATAT CCGGTTCT

TGTCAAGATTACTCTTGATGAAGGTCAGCCAGCCTATGCGCCTGGTCTGTACACCGT TCATCTG

TCCTCTTTCAAAGTTGGTCAGTTCGGTTCCCTTATGATTGACCGTCTGCGCCTCGTT CCGGCTAA

GTAACATGGAGCAGGTCGCGGATTTCGACACAATTTATCAGGCGATGATACAAATCT CCGTTGT

ACTTTGTTTCGCGCTTGGTATAATCGCTGGGGGTCAAAGATGAGTGTTTTAGTGTAT TCTTTTGC

CTCTTTCGTTTTAGGTTGGTGCCTTCGTAGTGGCATTACGTATTTTACCCGTTTAAT GGAAACTTC

CTCATGAAAAAGTCTTTAGTCCTCAAAGCCTCTGTAGCCGTTGCTACCCTCGTTCCG ATGCTGTC

TTTCGCTGCTGAGGGTGACGATCCCGCAAAAGCGGCCTTTAACTCCCTGCAAGCCTC AGCGAC

CGAATATATCGGTTATGCGTGGGCGATGGTTGTTGTCATTGTCGGCGCAACTATCGG TATCAAG

CT GTTTAAGAAATT CACCT CGAAAGCAAGCT GAT AAACCGATACAATT AAAGGCTCCTTTTGGAG

CCTTTTTTTT GGAGATTTT CAACGT GAAAAAATTATTATT CGCAATTCCTTTAGTT GTTCCTTT CTA

TTCT C ACT CCGCT GAAACT GTT GAAAGTT GTTT AGC AAAAT CCC AT ACAGAAAATT C ATTT ACT AA

CGTCTGGAAAGACGACAAAACTTTAGATCGTTACGCTAACTATGAGGGCTGTCTGTG GAATGCT

ACAGGCGTTGTAGTTTGTACTGGTGACGAAACTCAGTGTTACGGTACATGGGTTCCT ATTGGGC

TTGCTATCCCTGAAAATGAGGGTGGTGGCTCTGAGGGTGGCGGTTCTGAGGGTGGCG GTTCTG

AGGGTGGCGGTACTAAACCTCCTGAGTACGGTGATACACCTATTCCGGGCTATACTT ATATCAA

CCCT CT CGACGGCACTTATCCGCCT GGTACT GAGCAAAACCCCGCTAAT CCTAATCCTT CT CTT

GAGGAGTCTCAGCCTCTTAATACTTTCATGTTTCAGAATAATAGGTTCCGAAATAGG CAGGGGG

CATTAACTGTTTATACGGGCACTGTTACTCAAGGCACTGACCCCGTTAAAACTTATT ACCAGTAC

ACTCCTGTATCATCAAAAGCCATGTATGACGCTTACTGGAACGGTAAATTCAGAGAC TGCGCTTT

CCATT CTGGCTTTAAT GAGGATTTATTT GTTT GT GAATAT CAAGGCCAATCGT CT GACCTGCCT C

AACCTCCTGTCAATGCTGGCGGCGGCTCTGGTGGTGGTTCTGGTGGCGGCTCTGAGG GTGGT

GGCTCTGAGGGTGGCGGTTCTGAGGGTGGCGGCTCTGAGGGAGGCGGTTCCGGTGGT GGCT

CTGGTTCCGGTGATTTTGATTATGAAAAGATGGCAAACGCTAATAAGGGGGCTATGA CCGAAAA

TGCCGATGAAAACGCGCTACAGTCTGACGCTAAAGGCAAACTTGATTCTGTCGCTAC TGATTAC

GGTGCT GCTAT CGATGGTTT CATTGGT GACGTTTCCGGCCTTGCT AAT GGT AAT GGTGCTACT G

GTGATTTTGCTGGCTCTAATTCCCAAATGGCTCAAGTCGGTGACGGTGATAATTCAC CTTTAATG

AATAATTTCCGTCAATATTTACCTTCCCTCCCTCAATCGGTTGAATGTCGCCCTTTT GTCTTTGGC

GCTGGT AAACCAT AT GAATTTT CTATT GATT GT GACAAAAT AAACTTATT CCGTGGT GT CTTTGCG

TTTCTTTTATATGTTGCCACCTTTATGTATGTATTTTCTACGTTTGCTAACATACTG CGTAATAAGG

AGTCTTAATCATGCCAGTTCTTTTGGGTATTCCGTTATTATTGCGTTTCCTCGGTTT CCTTCTGGT

AACTTTGTTCGGCTATCTGCTTACTTTTCTTAAAAAGGGCTTCGGTAAGATAGCTAT TGCTATTTC

ATT GTTT CTTGCT CTT ATTATTGGGCTTAACT CAATT CTT GTGGGTT AT CT CT CT GATATT AGCGC

TCAATTACCCTCTGACTTTGTTCAGGGTGTTCAGTTAATTCTCCCGTCTAATGCGCT TCCCTGTTT

TT AT GTT ATT CTCTCTGT AAAGGCTGCT ATTTT C ATTTTT G ACGTT AAAC AAAAAAT CGTTT CTT AT

TTGGATTGGGATAAATAATATGGCTGTTTATTTTGTAACTGGCAAATTAGGCTCTGG AAAGACGC

TCGTTAGCGTTGGTAAGATTCAGGATAAAATTGTAGCTGGGTGCAAAATAGCAACTA ATCTTGAT TTAAGGCTTCAAAACCTCCCGCAAGTCGGGAGGTTCGCTAAAACGCCTCGCGTTCTTAGA ATAC CGGATAAGCCTTCTATATCTGATTTGCTTGCTATTGGGCGCGGTAATGATTCCTACGATG AAAAT AAAAACGGCTTGCTTGTTCTCGATGAGTGCGGTACTTGGTTTAATACCCGTTCTTGGAAT GATAA GGAAAGACAGCCGATTATTGATTGGTTTCTACATGCTCGTAAATTAGGATGGGATATTAT TTTTCT TGTTCAGGACTTATCTATTGTTGATAAACAGGCGCGTTCTGCATTAGCTGAACATGTTGT TTATT GTCGTCGTCTGGACAGAATTACTTTACCTTTTGTCGGTACTTTATATTCTCTTATTACTG GCTCGA AAATGCCTCTGCCTAAATTACATGTTGGCGTTGTTAAATATGGCGATTCTCAATTAAGCC CTACT GTTGAGCGTTGGCTTTATACTGGTAAGAATTTGTATAACGCATATGATACTAAACAGGCT TTTTCT AGTAATTATGATTCCGGTGTTTATTCTTATTTAACGCCTTATTTATCACACGGTCGGTAT TTCAAA CCATT AAATTT AGGT C AG AAG AT G AAATT AACT AAAAT AT ATTT G AAAAAGTTTT CTCGCGTT CTTT

GTCTTGCGATTGGATTTGCATCAGCATTTACATATAGTTATATAACCCAACCTAAGC CGGAGGTT AAAAAGGT AGT CTCT CAG ACCT AT G ATTTT GAT AAATT C ACT ATT G ACT CTTCT C AGCGT CTT AAT CTAAGCTATCGCTATGTTTTCAAGGATTCTAAGGGAAAATTAATTAATAGCGACGATTTA CAGAA GCAAGGTT ATT C ACT C AC AT AT ATT GATTT ATGT ACT GTTTCCATT AAAAAAGGT AATT CAAAT G A AATT GTT AAAT GT AATT AATTTT GTTTT CTT GAT GTTT GTTT CAT CAT CTT CTTTTGCT C AGGT AATT

GAAATGAATAATTCGCCTCTGCGCGATTTTGTAACTTGGTATTCAAAGCAATCAGGC GAATCCGT T ATT GTTT CTCCCG AT GT AAAAGGT ACT GTT ACT GTAT ATT CAT CT GACGTT AAACCT G AAAAT CT ACGCAATTTCTTTATTTCTGTTTTACGTGCAAATAATTTTGATATGGTAGGTTCTAACCC TTCCATT ATTCAGAAGTATAATCCAAACAATCAGGATTATATTGATGAATTGCCATCATCTGATAAT CAGGAA TAT GAT GATAATT CCGCTCCTT CT GGTGGTTT CTTT GTT CCGCAAAAT GAT AAT GTTACT CAAACT

TTTAAAATTAATAACGTTCGGGCAAAGGATTTAATACGAGTTGTCGAATTGTTTGTA AAGTCTAAT ACTTCTAAATCCTCAAATGTATTATCTATTGACGGCTCTAATCTATTAGTTGTTAGTGCT CCTAAA GAT ATTTT AG AT AACCTT CCT C AATT CCTTT C AACT GTT G ATTTGCCAACT G AC CAG AT ATT GATT GAGGGTTT GAT ATTT GAGGTT CAGCAAGGT GATGCTTTAGATTTTT CATTT GCTGCT GGCT CT CA GCGTGGCACT GTTGCAGGCGGT GTTAATACT GACCGCCT CACCT CT GTTTTAT CTT CTGCTGGT

GGTTCGTTCGGTATTTTTAATGGCGATGTTTTAGGGCTATCAGTTCGCGCATTAAAG ACTAATAG CCATTCAAAAATATTGTCTGTGCCACGTATTCTTACGCTTTCAGGTCAGAAGGGTTCTAT CTCTG TTGGCCAGAATGTCCCTTTTATTACTGGTCGTGTGACTGGTGAATCTGCCAATGTAAATA ATCCA TTT CAGACGATT GAGCGT CAAAAT GT AGGT ATTT CCAT GAGCGTTTTT CCT GTTGCAATGGCTGG CGGTAATATTGTTCTGGATATTACCAGCAAGGCCGATAGTTTGAGTTCTTCTACTCAGGC AAGTG

AT GTT ATT ACT AAT CAAAG AAGT ATT GCT ACAACGGTT AATTTGCGT G ATGGACAG ACT CTTTT AC TCGGTGGCCTCACTGATTATAAAAACACTTCTCAGGATTCTGGCGTACCGTTCCTGTCTA AAATC CCTTTAATCGGCCTCCTGTTTAGCTCCCGCTCTGATTCTAACGAGGAAAGCACGTTATAC GTGCT CGTCAAAGCAACCATAGTACGCGCCCTGTAGCGGCGCATTAAGCGCGGCGGGTGTGGTGG TTA CGCGCAGCGTGACCGCTACACTTGCCAGCGCCCTAGCGCCCGCTCCTTTCGCTTTCTTCC CTT

CCTTTCTCGCCACGTTCGCCGGCTTTCCCCGTCAAGCTCTAAATCGGGGGCTCCCTT TAGGGTT CCGATTTAGTGCTTTACGGCACCTCGACCCCAAAAAACTTGATTTGGGTGATGGTTCACG TAGT GGGCCATCGCCCTGATAGACGGTTTTTCGCCCTTTGACGTTGGAGTCCACGTTCTTTAAT AGTG GACT CTT GTTCCAAACTGGAACAACACT CAACCCTAT CT CGGGCTATT CTTTT GATTTATAAGGG ATTTTGCCGATTTCGGAACCACCATCAAACAGGATTTTCGCCTGCTGGGGCAAACCAGCG TGGA

CCGCTTGCTGCAACT CT CT CAGGGCCAGGCGGT GAAGGGCAAT CAGCT GTT GCCCGT CT CACT GGTGAAAAGAAAAACCACCCTGGCGCCCAATACGCAAACCGCCTCTCCCCGCGCGTTGGC CGA TTCATTAATGCAGCTGGCACGACAGGTTTCCCGACTGGAAAGCGGGCAGTGAGCGCAACG CAA TTAATGTGAGTTAGCTCACTCATTAGGCACCCCAGGCTTTACACTTTATGCTTCCGGCTC GTATG TT GT GTGGAATT GT GAGCGGATAACAATTT CACACAGGAAACAGCTAT GACCAT GATTACGAATT

CGAGCTCGGTACCCGGGGATCCTCAACTGTGAGGAGGCTCACGGACGCGAAGAACAG GCACG CGTGCTGGCAGAAACCCCCGGTATGACCGTGAAAACGGCCCGCCGCATTCTGGCCGCAGC AC CACAGAGTGCACAGGCGCGCAGTGACACTGCGCTGGATCGTCTGATGCAGGGGGCACCGG CA CCGCTGGCTGCAGGTAACCCGGCATCTGATGCCGTTAACGATTTGCTGAACACACCAGTG TAA GGGATGTTTATGACGAGCAAAGAAACCTTTACCCATTACCAGCCGCAGGGCAACAGTGAC CCG

GCTCATACCGCAACCGCGCCCGGCGGATTGAGTGCGAAAGCGCCTGCAATGACCCCG CTGAT GCTGGACACCTCCAGCCGTAAGCTGGTTGCGTGGGATGGCACCACCGACGGTGCTGCCGT TG GCATTCTTGCGGTTGCTGCTGACCAGACCAGCACCACGCTGACGTTCTACAAGTCCGGCA CGT TCCGTTATGAGGATGTGCTCTGGCCGGAGGCTGCCAGCGACGAGACGAAAAAACGGACCG CG TTTGCCGGAACGGCAATCAGCATCGTTTAACTTTACCCTTCATCACTAAAGGCCGCCTGT GCGG

CTTTTTTTACGGGATTTTTTTAT GT CGAT GT ACACAACCGCCCAACTGCT GGCGGCAAAT GAGCA GAAATTTAAGTTTGATCCGCTGTTTCTGCGTCTCTTTTTCCGTGAGAGCTATCCCTTCAC CACGG AGAAAGTCTATCTCTCACAAATTCCGGGACTGGTAAACATGGCGCTGTACGTTTCGCCGA TTGT TTCCGGTGAGGTTATCCGTTCCCGTGGCGGCTCCACCTCTGAAAGCTTGGCACTGGCCGT CGT TTTACAACGTCGTGACTGGGAAAACCCTGGCGTTACCCAACTTAATCGCCTTGCAGCACA TCCC CCTTTCGCCAGCTGGCGTAATAGCGAAGAGGCCCGCACCGATCGCCCTTCCCAACAGTTG CGC AGCCTGAATGGCGAATGGCGCTTTGCCTGGTTTCCGGCACCAGAAGCGGTGCCGGAAAGC TG GCTGGAGTGCGATCTTCCTGAGGCCGATACTGTCGTCGTCCCCTCAAACTGGCAGATGCA CGG TTACGATGCGCCCATCTACACCAACGTGACCTATCCCATTACGGTCAATCCGCCGTTTGT TCCC ACGGAGAATCCGACGGGTTGTTACTCGCTCACATTTAATGTTGATGAAAGCTGGCTACAG GAAG GCCAGACGCGAATTATTTTT GAT GGCGTTCCTATTGGTTAAAAAAT GAGCT GATTT AACAAAAATT

T AATGCGAATTTT AACAAAAT ATT AACGTTT AC AATTT AAAT ATTTGCTT AT AC AAT CTTCCT GTTTT TGGGGCTTTTCTGATTATCAACCGGGGTACATATGATTGACATGCTAGTTTTACGATTAC CGTTC AT CGATT CT CTT GTTT GCTCCAGACT CT CA

Table 2. Examples of staple strand sequences suitable for hexagonal barrel structure

Flurophore strand sequence SEG ID NO

AT AC AGG AAT GCCT G AGT AAT AT CAAT A 2

CTCAGAGGCAAGGATAAAAATGGAGAGG 3

TTCCCAAG AGT AGATTT AGTT CT AAAT C 4

CTGAATAAAAAGGTGGCATCATAGTAGT 5

T AAAGT ACAAT AACCT GTTT AAAG AATT 6

AAAT CAGATTGCT CCTTTT GAGTAGCT C 7

GGATTGCCGGAAGCAAACTCCTGGAAGT 8

GGCGAAGTTTTGCCAGAAGATTAA 9

GTGTCCCCCTCAAATGCTCAGAAA 10

ACCATAGCGTCCAATACCCCTGAC 11

GGTTGTAGGGAGAAGCCTTTAGAGATCT 12

AGCATT ATAAAGATT CAAAAGGCCGGAG 13

AGCAAAAACCCT CAT ATATTTT CTAGCT 14

AACAT GTTTT CATTTGGGGCGAT AAAT C 15

TT CATT CT AGATACATTTCGCATAAAGC 16

GAGGAAGGAGCTTCAAAGCGACAGTTGA 17

ACGAGAAT CATTTTTGCGGATTTAATT G 18

T ATT AT AC AG GATT AG AG AGT AT G C AAC 19

AT AAT AGTAAAAT GTTTGCAAAGC 20

CCCTGACGGTTCGTCATAAATATTAAATCAA 21

ACAT AACTTGGGAAGGCAAAAAGGAAGTTTCCATTGCATAAC 22

GCGATTATACGCAACGGCTACAGAAAGGCCG 23

CAACCATATTTCTTAAACAGCGTTAGTA 24

CAGCAGCTTTTTT CACGTT GAAGGAATT 25

CTTGCAGAGCCTTTAATT GTATT CAACA 26

AAAGGAACACT GAGTTTCGT CT CAGAGC 27

TTTGCTATTCCACAGACAGCCGTACCGC 28

CGAGGCACT CATT AACT CAT CAGGACTAAAGACTTGCT GAGG 29

CAAT AAAAT ACGT AAT GAT G AC AA 30

AGT ACAAGACAGCATCGGAACT CACCCT 31

CTTTTGCCAAAAAAAAGGCTCAGAATAG 32

CGATATAATCAGCTTGCTTTCATGGGAT 33

AATGAATTTAGCGTAACGATCTCACCGT 34

GCGAATAATAGGAACCCATGTTCAGGGA 35

GTTTCAGCAAACTACAACGCCCCACCCT 36 ATTATTCTAGCGACAGAATCATAGCCCC 37

CATTTGGAAACGTCACCAATGCACCGGA 38

TAGCAAAATAAAAGAAACGCAAGCCAGC 39

ACCAGAACAAAAGGGCGACATGAGGGAG 40

AAAAG AACACAAT C AAT AG AAGT G AATT 41

T ACAGAGT AT CTT ACCG AAGCG AGG AAA 42

GAG AATT AAG C CC AAT AAT AAG ATT AAG 43

AATCCAAATAAGAAACGTAACGTC 44

TT ACT GAAT CTT ACC AAC ACCCT G 45

AACTTTGCC AGTT AC AACAT AAAA 46

AAAATCACATTACCATTAGCACGGAACC 47

GGAAGGT CTTTAGCGT CAGACTTT CAT CG 48

ATCACCGCGATAGCAGCACCGCCATCTT 49

CGCAATAATGGTTTACCAGCGGACGGAA 50

ACTCCTT CACGGAATAAGTTT CTT GAGC 51

AACAAAGATAACCCACAAGAAAGT AT GT 52

AAAAAT GAAGAAAAGT AAGCACAAAGTT 53

ACAGGGAAAACAAT GAAATAGAAT ACCC 54

AGAAGCCATATTATTTACAGCCTT 55

TTTGAGCGTCTTTCCAGTAGACGG 56

AG AT AT AATTTT CAT GTTT AG AAATTT AAT G GTTTT AG GTCT 57

ACTCATCAGAACGCGAGGCATAATCGGCAAACCAAAGCC 58

AAC AACTTTTT C AAAT AGTT AT AT 59

ATTT AT CC AT AGCG AT AGCTTTT C AATT 60

C AAAT C CT AC AT AAAT C AAT ACTTTTTT 61

CCGGCTTAATCGTCGCTATTAGAAAACA 62

TT C ATTTT AT AC AGT AAC AGTTTTGC AC 63

GAAACAAGATTCGCCT GATT GTT CT GAA 64

AATGGAAT CAGGTTTAACGT CAAGAAAT 65

G AG AG ACTTCCCTT AG AAT CC AG AT GAT 66

T ATT CT AG AG AAC AT ACAAAT GTT AATTT CAT CTTTT AACCT 67

AAATTAAACATCGGGAGAAACGAACCTA 68

CTTAATTGCAAGACAAAGAACGCT GAT G 69

AACT AT AGT GAAT AACCTTGCT AACAAT 70

ACCGGAATCATAATCGACCGTGTGATAAATAGTGA 71

ACCT G AGT ACC AAGTT AC AAATCCT GAT 72

AGAACTCGACATT CTGGCCAATATTTTT 73

ATTACCGTACATTGGCAGATTCCCTAAA 74

TAAAGGGGGAACGGTACGCCATTGCAAC 75

GGCGCGTCCGTTGTAGCAATATAGTAAT 76

TTCCT CGT GAGGCCACCGAGTCGGCCTT 77

ATCACCCGGTCACGCTGCGCGTTGCTTT 78

ACTAAATGAAAGCGAAAGGAGCAGAGCG 79

AATCGGCATAAATCAAAAGAACTAAAGG 80 ACAACGTCAAAGGGCGAATCAGGG 81

CCCCAGTTTGGAACAAGGTTTTTT 82

AGGAAAAAATCGTCTGAAATGAATACCG 83

AACAT C AAG AACCCTT CT G AC AAG AAT A 84

GCTGGTACACACGACCAGTAACTTTAAT 85

GACGAGCTCTGTCCATCACGCGAGTAGA 86

GGAGCTAGAGAAGT GTTTTTAGAACAAT 87

GAGCCCCCGTGGCGAGAAAGGGGCCGAT 88

CGATGGCCACACCCGCCGCGCGCTACAG 89

GGGGT CGTAGGGCGCTGGCAAACGT GCT 90

CATTATTAAAGAACGTGGTGAACC 91

TTTAGATAGGGTTGAGTGTAAAGC 92

GCT AACTTCCAGT CAAT CGTTT CGGTGGTGCCAT CAACGT CA 93

TAGCTCTGCCGCCACGGGAACAGGGCGA 94

TGCCGGACCGCACAGGCGGCCAAAGAGA 95

CGCTGGCTGCTGATTGCCGTTGAGATAG 96

TTAAATTACGTTGTAAAACGAGAAAGGG 97

CAGCAACGGCGGTTGTGTACAATTTGCC 98

GTTGCAGGCCAACGCTTTGCTTCCAGCATCAGCGGGGCCAGA 99

TCACCGCGTTTGCGGCTGGTAGCAGGCGCTTTCGCGTCTCGT 100

GGGGCCAGCTCTTACACACCAGCTTACGGCTCGGAACG 101

CCGGGTTAGAATGCCAACGGCTGGTCAG 102

GCGTGGTAAAAAAATCCCGTAATCAAAC 103

GCACAT CAT GAAGGGT AAAGT GAAGGGA 104

ACTTT CT CT CACCGGAAACAACAGGCT G 105

GCCAGCAGCCAGGGTTTTCCCGCGATTA 106

CGCAGAATGCCAAGCTTTCAGTTCGCTA 107

ACTCAGGTAGCCCGGAATAGGACGGGGTCAGTGCCCTTTTGAT 108

T AGC AAGG ACT CCT C AAGAG AAAAGT ATT AAG AGG ATT CACA 109

CACCACCGGATTAGCGGGGTTAACCTATTATTCTGCATTAAA 110

CAGAACCGTACCAGGCGGATAAAT GCCCCCT GCCT CGCAGT C 111

CACCCT CT CGAGAGGGTT GATACAGTGCCCGT ATAT CCAGTA 112

T GTTTGGGGCAATT CAT CAATCCGT CAATAGAT AAAAATAT C 113

TGCGT AGGTTT GAGTAACATT ACGTTATT AATTTTGCT GAAC 114

GTAAAACTGCGGAACAAAGAACGTATTAAATCCTTCCTCAAT 115

CCATATCGAAGGAGCGGAATTTTTACAAACAATT CTTGGCAA 116

T AAT G G AT ATT CCT GATT AT CG AGG ATTT AG AAGT G G AATT G 117

GGATGTGGAGGGGACGACGACGTAATGG 118

TTACGCCGCCTCAGGAAGATCGGAACAA 119

TCGGTGCAGCCAGCTTTCCGGCAACCCG 120

AGTT GGGTAACCGTGCAT CTGGT GTAGA 121

CGCAACTT CTGGTGCCGGAAAACATTAA 122

Dimer strands

CAACTTT AAT CATT GT GAATTACCGT AAATTTT CA 123 AGATTT GTAT CATCGGAAACAA 124 GTACAAGCGCCCTGATAATTACCCAAATCAACGTAA 125 GCCATATTTAAAGTAGGGCAAGAACGGGTATTTGTCTTTATGT 126 AACCAACGCCGAAAAATAATATCCTACGAGCCCTTATCA 127 ATCCGCTCACAAATTGCGTTG 128 CTGCAGCCAGCGGTGCTCAGATGCTCACTGCCCGCTTCACATTATTCC 129 GTCAGCACCGAACGGCACGGTGCCTTTCCTGTGTGAAATTGTT 130 CAAAGCTGCTCAGGGCTTGAGATGGTTTA 131 Structural

T G ATTT C AACC AT AAAGT GACCAT CAT AT AAACC A 132 ACAAAGGAAACAAGAGAATCG 133 ACAGT CAACAGGAAGATT GTATTT AAAT CACGTTGCCAG 134 T GAT ATT ATAAT CAGAAAAGCTTTT GTTATT GACCAGTATCGAGCT 135 CGTTAAATGCCAAGGCAGCTATATTTTAAATACCT 136 GATAAAT CAAT CATAT GTACCATTTTTGCTCCGT GGCAC 137 GT AGCT AGT AAT CGT AAAACTTTTTT AACG AGT AAC ACCGCT GTTG 138 AGATGAAAAATAGCAGGAATACCACATTAATAAAAGCAC 139 AAGGGAACCGTACGAAGCGAACTAACGGAACGAGATTTGAGA 140 AATCCCAGCGATTTTAAGAACTGGTAAGAAACACCAGAACGAGTATTAT 141 CTCCATGTTACCTAAAACTACCAGTCAGGACGGCCAAAACATA 142 GCAGACGAAAGAGAAAAATCTACGTTCAACTAAGACG 143 AT GG AAT AC ATT AGCCGCT G ACCTT CAT C AAAC ACT ATGG AATT A 144 CACAAACGGGCCTAAAACGGTCAACAGACCAGGCGCATACCAGACTGCAGAT 145 TTAGGCTTTGTTTGACCCCGCGACCTTGACAAGAACCGCTTG 146 AGGACAT CCACGAGCT GTAATGCTTAAGAGGT GAC 147 AGATTAAGCAAAATGGT CGGT GT CAACAGGT GT CA 148 TTTACCGTAACAACTAAAAATCTCGGGATCGGAGG 149 CCGT GTAGCAAACAACTT CGGTTTTT CGGT CTTT C 150 GTAAGGTTTACT CATAGTTT CT GT GAGGT GACGCC 151 TCAGCCACCCACCAGTACGGAGTGCAAAAGGGGAG 152 AACAAAT CAGACGATTGGCCT 153 GCCAGAAT GACAGGGCGTTT GTAAT CAGATTAAAGAATT 154 T CT GAAT CACCAGAT CAAAATAAACCATT CAC 155 AGCGTCACAGAGCCCCACCACAGGCCGGGAATTAGAAGA 156 GCCTCCCAGAGCCACCACCCTTACATGGTTGAGTAATAA 157 GCATTTT CGGT CAAGTTTGCAAATATT CCAA 158 CTT ATT AAGGTT GAGGCAGGT AAAT CCT AAACAT G AGG ATT ACT CA 159 TTCATAAGCCGCCGCCAGCATTGGAAAGATTTCGGTTGC 160 ACCAGAGGCCACCAGAACCACTTACCGTAACAGTTAGTGCCGAGAA 161 CGAATTTTGTCTGGCATGAGCAAGAGCGCATAGCC 162 AGAGGAAACCCCTTTTTAAAAT AGTCCC 163 CATATAACGGCAATAGCAGAATAAAATAAACAACC 164 CAC ATT ACGCTT G AGTT AACT G AACGCT AACT G AA 165 TAACTCCCGATTATCAACATTTTCGAGCCAGTGCG 166 AATT G AACAAAAC AT GT AATTT AG AGT AT AAGT ACCGC 167

GCCGCTAATGAGAATATAAAGTACAAAA 168

GCCTCGTAGGAATCATTATAGCAAAAGA 169

TTAAGCAAGCCGTTTTTGAAGGCTGAGG 170

ATATAATAAGCAGAACGCGCCTGTCTTGCGGTATCCGG 171

TACTACT AG AC G AC AAAAAAC AAC AT GTT C ATT AAAT CG C AAAT C 172

TTATCTTACCGCAGAGGCAATAGATAAGTCCCAGTTTTAGCG 173

G AAG AATT ACT ATGT GAT GT AAATGCGAG AAGCT C 174

ACGACAT CAAATT AATTTACCTTT CT GACCTT AT C 175

T ACCTTT G AAC AAAAG ATT G AAAAAAAAT C AG AAA 176

TT AACCTTTTTT AC ATTTT CT GT AAGGTT GGT ATT 177

CT CAAAT AAT CT AACAGACAAC AG AG AT CTTG 178

C AAT AT C G AG AG CCT ATT AGTT AAAAG G AAACT AT AAAA 179

ATCAACACGCCTGCCTGATAGCACCAGTATAT 180

AGGAAGGTGAGGCGCATTAAAGATTATTCCAGCCAGAAT 181

AACG AAC AG AT AAAAC AG AGGTT ATCTAT ACATTT AGAT GAT ATT A 182

GAATGGCAGCAGCAAAT GAAAAT CAAACTGCCCGAAT CATTTAGAAATAAGAT 183

GCGCGAAAACAGTGCCACGCTTGGTCAGGACAACTACCACCAAAAA 184

ACATCGCGTCAGTATTAACACGTTGAAAATTAGACATCATCAAGGGTTAAATA 185

CCTAAATTAAACTATGGTAACCACCCAC 186

CCATAATCAGTTAGAATCGGGCGCAGGT 187

CCTAACAGGAAAGGGAACGGAACCTAGC 188

G AG ACGT AT AGT GT AGC AAAT C AAAGT C 189

TACGACTCCACAACATAATAGCTGCCCTGCATCAG 190

GCCGTT GTT CCAGCAGGT GAGGAT GCACT CT GT G 191

CCGGATGGTGGTCCGTGAGAATGCGGCGGGCCCCTGCGTATTGGG 192

CACAAAGT GT CTCGAATGCAGT GT CA 193

GACATCAAAAGGGGGTAAAAACCACGGTGTATCAT 194

TT AGT CTTT ATGCGG AAAAG AGC AG AGT AAT CTG 195

TGCCTGTTCTTCGCGTTCCGATTGCCCT 196

ACGTTCAGCAGGGAAACCTGTCGTTGCCTAAGAAG 197

CTGCGAACATCCGCATTAATGAATCGCAAGCGGTCCACAGCCTG 198

GTGCAAGGTTTCGCGGGGAGAGGCGCTGGCCCCCTG 199

GCATGGTGTGATCCAGCTCGTAATCATGGTCCGAGCCGTGAGTGA 200

ATTATGGGTATGCGGCCAGCCTCCTCACAGTCGAAAATTGAGAGA 201

TAAGGAGGTGCGT CATACGCCT GTCCCCGGGTACCGAGAAGCTGGTTT G 202

GGCCGGCCAGACAGCGGAAAAAAGCTTGTAGCCAC 203

GGAGGATAACCCGTGGTTAAACGAAGCCTCCGGT C 204

TTT CTGCAAGAGT CACGT CTGCT CTCGACATGCT G 205

TCCGGGCCTCAGGTGGACACGGAATTTAGTGCTCA 206

CAT C ATT GAAAAT AAGGG AT ATT CAATT GTGT CG A 207

GAAAGACTGGCTCGTTTAGGCTGGGAACGAGGC 208

AT GT GAGCCAATAGGAACGCCAT GAACGTTTT 209

GATAGGTT GTAAACGTT AAT ACCCAAAAAAT CACCGT GT 210 ACGGCGGAAAATTCGCATTAACCGGTTGCAAC 211 TCGGATTTTAAAT CAGCT CATAGCAT GTTAATGCCTTTT 212