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Hierarchical self-assembly of the DNA-grafted supramolecular polymers

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.71318
Date of Publication
July 2, 2015
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Division/Institute

Departement für Chemi...

Author
Vyborna, Yuliiaorcid-logo
Departement für Chemie und Biochemie (DCB)
Häner, Robertorcid-logo
Departement für Chemie und Biochemie (DCB)
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

500 - Science::540 - ...

Language
English
Description
Conjugation of functional entities with a specific set of optical, mechanical or biological properties to DNA strands allows engineering of sophisticated DNA-containing architectures. Among various hybrid systems, DNA-grafted polymers occupy an important place in modern materials science. In this contribution we present the non-covalent synthesis and properties of DNA-grafted linear supramolecular polymers (SPs), which are assembled in a controllable manner from short chimeric DNA-pyrene oligomers. The synthetic oligomers consist of two parts: a 10 nucleotides long DNA chain and a covalently attached segment of variable number of phosphodiester-linked pyrenes. The temperature-dependent formation of DNA-grafted SPs is described by a nucleation-elongation mechanism.
The high tendency of pyrenes to aggregate in water, leads to the rapid formation of SPs. The core of the assemblies consists of stacked pyrenes. They form a 1D platform, to which the DNA chains are attached. Combined spectroscopic and microscopic studies reveal that the major driving forces of the polymerization are π-stacking of pyrenes and hydrophobic interactions, and DNA pairing contributes to a lesser extent. AFM and TEM experiments demonstrate that the 1D SPs appear as elongated ribbons with a length of several hundred nanometers. They exhibit an apparent helical structure with a pitch-to-pitch distance of 50±15 nm.
Since DNA pairing is a highly selective process, the ongoing studies are aimed to utilize DNA-grafted SPs for the programmable arrangement of functional entities. For example, the addition of non-modified complementary DNA strands to the DNA-grafted SPs leads to the cooperative formation of higher-order assemblies. Also, our experiments suggest that the fluorescent pyrene core of 1D ribbons serves as an efficient donor platform for energy transfer applications.
Related URL
http://ismsc2015.unistra.fr/
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/134832
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Yuliia%20Vyborna%20ISMSC2015.pdftextAdobe PDF144.87 KBpublishedOpen
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