Autonomous DNA nanobots break new ground
Phys.org - 18-Nov-2025New DNA origami nanorobots can store energy and perform multistep tasks without external power
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Professor of Physical Chemistry at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Philip Tinnefeld is a Professor of Physical Chemistry at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, leading a highly interdisciplinary NanoBioSciences research group that brings together molecular biology, biophysics, nanophotonics, and physical chemistry. He specialises in single-molecule detection and super-resolution microscopy, and he uses DNA origami to build modular nanoscale devices—such as force sensors, fluorescence amplifiers, and molecular robots—that can sense, compute, and respond autonomously. Under his leadership, the lab is also developing advanced biosensing platforms and imaging tools by combining DNA nanotechnology with 2D materials like graphene, pushing the frontiers of how we observe and control biological processes at the molecular level.
Visit website: https://tinnefeld.cup.uni-muenchen.de/
See alsoDetails last updated 19-Nov-2025
New DNA origami nanorobots can store energy and perform multistep tasks without external power