4.6 Article

Tunable Hydrophobicity in DNA Micelles: Design, Synthesis, and Characterization of a New Family of DNA Amphiphiles

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 16, Issue 43, Pages 12852-12859

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201001816

Keywords

DNA hybridization; nanoparticles; nucleic acids; nucleolipids; self-assembly

Funding

  1. EU (ERC)
  2. Netherlands organization for scientific research (NWO-Vici)
  3. German research foundation (DFG)
  4. Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials
  5. Nuffic (Huygens scholarship programme)
  6. EU (ECCell)

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This work describes the synthesis and characterization of a new family of DNA amphiphiles containing modified nucleobases. The hydrophobicity was imparted by the introduction of a dodec-1-yne chain at the 5-position of the uracil base, which allowed precise and simple tuning of the hydrophobic properties through solid-phase DNA synthesis. The micelles formed from these modified DNA sequences were characterized by atomic force microscopy, dynamic light scattering, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These experiments revealed the role of the quantity and location of the hydrophobic units in determining the morphology and stability of the micelles. The effects of hybridization on the physical characteristics of the DNA micelles were also studied; these results showed potential for the sequence-specific noncovalent functionalization of the self-assembled aggregates.

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