Unveiling Stability Criteria of DNA-Carbon Nanotubes Constructs by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Computational Modeling
Author(s) -
Svetlana Kilina,
Dmitry Yarotski,
A. Alec Talin,
Sergei Tretiak,
Antoinette J. Taylor,
Alexander V. Balatsky
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of drug delivery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-3014
pISSN - 2090-3022
DOI - 10.1155/2011/415621
Subject(s) - dna , stacking , carbon nanotube , scanning tunneling microscope , materials science , nanotechnology , a dna , quantum tunnelling , chirality (physics) , nanotube , binding energy , dna origami , chemical physics , crystallography , chemistry , nanostructure , physics , optoelectronics , atomic physics , biochemistry , chiral symmetry breaking , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , quark , nambu–jona lasinio model
We present a combined approach that relies on computational simulations and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) measurements to reveal morphological properties and stability criteria of carbon nanotube-DNA (CNT-DNA) constructs. Application of STM allows direct observation of very stable CNT-DNA hybrid structures with the well-defined DNA wrapping angle of 63.4° and a coiling period of 3.3 nm. Using force field simulations, we determine how the DNA-CNT binding energy depends on the sequence and binding geometry of a single strand DNA. This dependence allows us to quantitatively characterize the stability of a hybrid structure with an optimal π -stacking between DNA nucleotides and the tube surface and better interpret STM data. Our simulations clearly demonstrate the existence of a very stable DNA binding geometry for (6,5) CNT as evidenced by the presence of a well-defined minimum in the binding energy as a function of an angle between DNA strand and the nanotube chiral vector. This novel approach demonstrates the feasibility of CNT-DNA geometry studies with subnanometer resolution and paves the way towards complete characterization of the structural and electronic properties of drug-delivering systems based on DNA-CNT hybrids as a function of DNA sequence and a nanotube chirality.
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