4.8 Article

Programmable Quantitative DNA Nanothermometers

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages 3976-3981

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b00156

Keywords

Nanothermometry; molecular switches; DNA nanotechnology; biosensors; PCR; fluorescence

Funding

  1. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [2014-06403]

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Developing molecules, switches, probes or nano materials that are able to respond to specific temperature changes should prove of utility for several applications in nanotechnology. Here, we describe bioinspired strategies to design DNA thermoswitches with programmable linear response ranges that can provide either a precise ultrasensitive. response over a desired, small temperature interval (+/- 0.05 degrees C) or an extended linear response over a wide temperature range (e.g., from 25 to 90 degrees C). Using structural modifications or inexpensive DNA stabilizers, we show that we can tune the transition midpoints of DNA thermometers from 30 to 85 degrees C. Using multimeric switch architectures, we are able to create ultrasensitive thermometers that display large quantitative fluorescence gains within small temperature variation (e.g., > 700% over 10 degrees C). Using a combination of thermoswitches of different stabilities or a mix of stabilizers of various strengths, we can create extended thermometers that respond linearly up to 50 degrees C in temperature range. Here, we demonstrate the reversibility, robustness, and efficiency of these programmable DNA thermometers by monitoring temperature change inside individual wells during polymerase chain reactions. We discuss the potential applications of these programmable DNA thermoswitches in various nanotechnology fields including cell imaging, nanofluidics, nanomedecine, nanoelectronics, nanomaterial, and synthetic biology.

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