Effects of Molecular Size
and Surface Hydrophobicity
on Oligonucleotide Interfacial Dynamics
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Abstract
Single-molecule total internal reflection fluorescence
microscopy
was used to observe the dynamic behavior of polycytosine single-stranded
DNA (ssDNA) (1–50 nucleotides long) at the interface between
aqueous solution and hydrophilic (oligoethylene glycol-modified fused
silica, OEG) and hydrophobic (octadecyltriethoxysilane-modified fused
silica, OTES) solid surfaces. High throughput molecular tracking was
used to determine >75 000 molecular trajectories for each
molecular
length, which were then used to calculate surface residence time and
squared displacement (i.e., “step-size”) distributions.
On hydrophilic OEG surfaces, the surface residence time increased
systematically with ssDNA chain length, as expected due to increasing
molecule–surface interactions. Interestingly, the residence
time decreased with increasing ssDNA length on the hydrophobic OTES
surface, particularly for longer chains. Similarly, the interfacial
mobility of polynucleotides slowed with increasing chain length on
OEG, but became faster on OTES. On OTES surfaces, the rates associated
with desorption and surface diffusion exhibited the distinctive anomalous
temperature dependence that is characteristic of hydrophobic interactions
for short-chain species but not for longer chains. These combined
observations suggest that long oligonucleotides adopt conformations
minimizing hydrophobic interactions, e.g., by internal sequestration
of hydrophobic nucleobases