4.6 Article

Surface-Mediated DNA Hybridization: Effects of DNA Conformation, Surface Chemistry, and Electrostatics

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 33, Issue 44, Pages 12651-12659

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b02675

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Single-molecule Forster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) was used to study the dynamic association of mobile donor-labeled ssDNA oligonucleotides (target) with covalently immobilized complementary acceptor-labeled ssDNA oligonucleotides (probe). While probe-target association events were resolved for all experiments, such FRET events were far more likely to occur in systems with complementarity and on hydrophobic, as compared to hydrophilic, surfaces. The distribution of donor acceptor association-time intervals did not exhibit simple first-order kinetics, and when decomposed into a superposition of first-order processes, only a small fraction of events corresponded to a long-lived state that was presumed to represent true DNA hybridization, while the majority of association events were transient, representing nonspecific associations or partial hybridization. The structure of the DNA target and probe affected both the stability of the hybridized state, as well as the likelihood that an association between the two led to hybridization. In particular, the likelihood of hybridization decreased for longer target strands and for targets with stem-loop secondary structure. The presence of oligonucleotide secondary structure reduced the stability Of hybridization, while greater complementarity increased stability of the hybridized state. Interestingly, increased ionic strength (i.e., greater electrostatic screening) increased the probability of hybridization but did not influence the lifetime of the hybridized state. Combined, these observations provide a nuanced view of surface-mediated DNA hybridization, where various factors independently influence the probability and stability of hybridization.

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