1 research outputs found
Stimulus-Responsive Plasmonic Chiral Signals of Gold Nanorods Organized on DNA Origami
In
response to environmental variations, living cells need to arrange
the conformational changes of macromolecules to achieve the specific
biofunctions. Inspired by natural molecular machines, artificial macromolecular
assemblies with controllable nanostructures and environmentally responsive
functions can be designed. By assembling macromolecular nanostructures
with noble metal nanoparticles, environmental information could be
significantly amplified and modulated. However, manufacturing dynamic
plasmonic nanostructures that are efficiently responsive to different
stimuli is still a challenging task. Here we demonstrate a stimulus-responsive
plasmonic nanosystem based on DNA origami-organized gold nanorods
(GNRs). L-shaped GNR dimers were assembled on rhombus-shaped DNA origami
templates. The geometry and chiral signals of the GNR nanoarchitectures
respond to multiple stimuli, including glutathione reduction, restriction
enzyme action, pH change, or photoirradiation. While the glutathione
reduction or restriction enzyme caused irreversible changes in the
plasmonic circular dichroism (CD) signals, both pH and light irradiation
triggered reversible changes in the plasmonic CD. Our system transduces
external stimuli into conformational changes and circular dichroism
responses in near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. By this approach, programmable
optical reporters for essential biological signals can be fabricated