Chemical orthogonality is the ability of one or more reactions to efficiently proceed in the presence of other reactive functional groups. The concept of including orthogonal reactions to fabricate molecular structures has been applied to natural and synthetic polymers and often used as a tool to increase the level of chemical complexity. Nucleic acids (e.g., DNA and RNA), for instance, are polymers that serve as ubiquitous information-bearing species throughout biology, present the most versatile class of materials for producing diverse, specific nanostructures to date owing to their predictable, information-directed self-assembly. The information borne by nucleic acids is encoded in the sequences of orthogonal nucleobases affixed to a sin...