Cation-Size-Dependent DNA Adsorption Kinetics and
Packing Density on Gold Nanoparticles: An Opposite Trend
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Abstract
The
property of DNA is strongly influenced by counterions. Packing
a dense layer of DNA onto a gold nanoparticle (AuNP) generates an
interesting colloidal system with many novel physical properties such
as a sharp melting transition, protection of DNA against nucleases,
and enhanced complementary DNA binding affinity. In this work, the
effect of monovalent cation size is studied. First, for free AuNPs
without DNA, larger group 1A cations are more efficient in inducing
their aggregation. The same trend is observed with group 2A metals
using AuNPs capped by various self-assembled monolayers. After establishing
the salt range to maintain AuNP stability, the DNA adsorption kinetics
is also found to be faster with the larger Cs<sup>+</sup> compared
to the smaller Li<sup>+</sup>. This is attributed to the easier dehydration
of Cs<sup>+</sup>, and dehydrated Cs<sup>+</sup> might condense on
the AuNP surface to reduce the electrostatic repulsion effectively.
However, after a long incubation time with a high salt concentration,
Li<sup>+</sup> allows ∼30% more DNA packing compared to Cs<sup>+</sup>. Therefore, Li<sup>+</sup> is more effective in reducing
the charge repulsion among DNA, and Cs<sup>+</sup> is more effective
in screening the AuNP surface charge. This work suggests that physicochemical
information at the bio/nanointerface can be obtained by using counterions
as probes