Sensors (Jul 2004)

Supermolecular Interaction of Ferrocenium with Yeast DNA and Application in Electrochemical Sensing for Hybridization Recognition of Yeast DNA

  • Jiayin Gu,
  • Baofen Ye,
  • Huangxian Ju

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s40500071
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 5
pp. 71 – 83

Abstract

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Abstract: The supermolecular interactions of single-stranded yeast DNA (ssDNA) and double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) with ferrocenium (Fc+) both in solution and at the electrode/solution interface were studied with UV spectroscopy and electrochemical method. The interaction of covalently immobilized dsDNA with Fc+ resulted in a change of the electrode behavior from diffusion-controlled to surface-controlled and an increase in the current response of Fc+ reduction, which has been used to develop a novel electrochemical yeast DNA sensor for hybridization recognition of immobilized yeast ssDNA to its complementary ssDNA (cDNA). The adsorption constants of Fc+ on ssDNA and dsDNA modified gold electrode surface were (3.38±0.04)×103 M-1 and (2.02±0.02)×104 M-1, respectively, indicating a higher affinity of dsDNA to Fc+. UV spectra and the influence of ion strength showed that the interaction mode between Fc+ and dsDNA in solution might be a groove binding. The interaction between Fc+ and immobilized DNA was mainly an electrostatic model.

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