Sensors (Oct 2014)

Nanomechanical DNA Origami pH Sensors

  • Akinori Kuzuya,
  • Ryosuke Watanabe,
  • Yusei Yamanaka,
  • Takuya Tamaki,
  • Masafumi Kaino,
  • Yuichi Ohya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s141019329
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
pp. 19329 – 19335

Abstract

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Single-molecule pH sensors have been developed by utilizing molecular imaging of pH-responsive shape transition of nanomechanical DNA origami devices with atomic force microscopy (AFM). Short DNA fragments that can form i-motifs were introduced to nanomechanical DNA origami devices with pliers-like shape (DNA Origami Pliers), which consist of two levers of 170-nm long and 20-nm wide connected at a Holliday-junction fulcrum. DNA Origami Pliers can be observed as in three distinct forms; cross, antiparallel and parallel forms, and cross form is the dominant species when no additional interaction is introduced to DNA Origami Pliers. Introduction of nine pairs of 12-mer sequence (5'-AACCCCAACCCC-3'), which dimerize into i-motif quadruplexes upon protonation of cytosine, drives transition of DNA Origami Pliers from open cross form into closed parallel form under acidic conditions. Such pH-dependent transition was clearly imaged on mica in molecular resolution by AFM, showing potential application of the system to single-molecular pH sensors.

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