3 research outputs found
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Nanomechanics of self-assembled DNA building blocks
DNA has become a powerful platform to design functional nanodevices. DNA nanodevices are often composed of self-assembled DNA building blocks that differ significantly from the structure of native DNA. In this study, we present Flow Force Microscopy as a massively parallel approach to study the nanomechanics of DNA self-assemblies on the single-molecular level. The high-throughput experiments performed in a simple microfluidic channel enable statistically meaningful studies with nanometer scale precision in a time frame of several minutes. A surprisingly high flexibility was observed for a typical construct used in DNA origami, reflected in a persistence length of 10.2 nm, a factor of five smaller than for native DNA. The enhanced flexibility is attributed to the discontinuous backbone of DNA self-assemblies that facilitate base pair opening by thermal fluctuations at the end of hybridized oligomers. We believe that the results will contribute to the fundamental understanding of DNA nanomechanics and help to improve the design of DNA nanodevices with applications in biological analysis and clinical research
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Single-Polymer Friction Force Microscopy of dsDNA Interacting with a Nanoporous Membrane
Surface-grafted polymers can reduce friction between solids in liquids by compensating the normal load with osmotic pressure, but they can also contribute to friction when fluctuating polymers entangle with the sliding counter face. We have measured forces acting on a single fluctuating double-stranded DNA polymer, which is attached to the tip of an atomic force microscope and interacts intermittently with nanometer-scale methylated pores of a self-assembled polystyrene-block-poly(4-vinylpyridine) membrane. Rare binding of the polymer into the pores is followed by a stretching of the polymer between the laterally moving tip and the surface and by a force-induced detachment. We present results for the velocity dependence of detachment forces and of attachment frequency and discuss them in terms of rare excursions of the polymer beyond its equilibrium configuration
Single-Polymer Friction Force Microscopy of dsDNA Interacting with a Nanoporous Membrane
Surface-grafted polymers can reduce friction
between solids in liquids by compensating the normal load with
osmotic pressure, but they can also contribute to friction when
fluctuating polymers entangle with the sliding counter face. We
have measured forces acting on a single fluctuating doublestranded DNA polymer, which is attached to the tip of an atomic
force microscope and interacts intermittently with nanometer-scale
methylated pores of a self-assembled polystyrene-block-poly(4-
vinylpyridine) membrane. Rare binding of the polymer into the
pores is followed by a stretching of the polymer between the
laterally moving tip and the surface and by a force-induced
detachment. We present results for the velocity dependence of
detachment forces and of attachment frequency and discuss them
in terms of rare excursions of the polymer beyond its equilibrium configuration