Time-Gated DNA Photonic Wires with Förster
Resonance Energy Transfer Cascades Initiated by a Luminescent Terbium Donor
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Abstract
Functional
DNA nanotechnology is a rapidly growing area of research
with many prospective photonic applications, including roles as wires
and switches, logic operators, and smart biological probes and delivery
vectors. Photonic wire constructs are one such example and comprise
a Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) cascade between
fluorescent dyes arranged periodically along a DNA scaffold. To date,
the majority of research on photonic wires has focused on setting
new benchmarks for efficient energy transfer over more steps and across
longer distances, using almost exclusively organic fluorescent dyes
and strictly DNA structures. Here, we expand the range of materials
utilized with DNA photonic wires by demonstrating the use of a luminescent
terbium complex (Tb) as an initial donor for a four-step FRET cascade
along a ∼15 nm long DNA/locked nucleic acid (LNA) photonic
wire. The inclusion of LNA nucleotides increases the thermal stability
of the photonic wires while the Tb affords time-gated emission measurements
and other optical benefits. Time-gating minimizes unwanted background
emission, whether from direct excitation of fluorescent dyes along
the length of the photonic wire, from excess dye-labeled DNA strands
in the sample, or from a biological sample matrix. Observed efficiencies
for Tb-to-dye energy transfer are also closer to the predicted values
than those for dye-to-dye energy transfer, and the Tb can be used
as an initial FRET donor for a variety of next-in-line acceptors at
different spectral positions. We show that the key to using the Tb
as an effective initial donor is to optimally position the next-in-line
acceptor dye in a so-called “sweet spot” where the FRET
efficiency is sufficiently high for practicality, but not so high
as to suppress time-gated emission by shortening the Tb emission lifetime
to within the instrument lag or delay time necessary for measurements.
Overall, the initiation of a time-gated FRET cascade with a Tb donor
is a very promising strategy for the design, characterization, and
application of DNA-based photonic wires and other functional DNA nanostructures