JOURNAL ARTICLE

What Controls the Melting Properties of DNA-Linked Gold Nanoparticle Assemblies?

Rongchao JinGuosheng WuZhi LiChad A. MirkinGeorge C. Schatz

Year: 2003 Journal:   Journal of the American Chemical Society Vol: 125 (6)Pages: 1643-1654   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

We report a series of experiments and a theoretical model designed to systematically define and evaluate the relative importance of nanoparticle, oligonucleotide, and environmental variables that contribute to the observed sharp melting transitions associated with DNA-linked nanoparticle structures. These variables include the size of the nanoparticles, the surface density of the oligonucleotides on the nanoparticles, the dielectric constant of the surrounding medium, target concentration, and the position of the nanoparticles with respect to one another within the aggregate. The experimental data may be understood in terms of a thermodynamic model that attributes the sharp melting to a cooperative mechanism that results from two key factors: the presence of multiple DNA linkers between each pair of nanoparticles and a decrease in the melting temperature as DNA strands melt due to a concomitant reduction in local salt concentration. The cooperative melting effect, originating from short-range duplex-to-duplex interactions, is independent of DNA base sequences studied and should be universal for any type of nanostructured probe that is heavily functionalized with oligonucleotides. Understanding the fundamental origins of the melting properties of DNA-linked nanoparticle aggregates (or monolayers) is of paramount importance because these properties directly impact one's ability to formulate high sensitivity and selectivity DNA detection systems and construct materials from these novel nanoparticle materials.

Keywords:
Nanoparticle Chemistry Oligonucleotide Duplex (building) DNA Melting point Colloidal gold Nucleic acid thermodynamics Nanotechnology Materials science Base sequence Organic chemistry

Metrics

1354
Cited By
20.24
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
66
Refs
1.00
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Gold and Silver Nanoparticles Synthesis and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Nanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
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