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DNA ON THE ASSEMBLY LINE
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
EVANSTON, Ill. (August 14, '96)
The discovery of a method for assembling nanoparticles
(particles with a diameter 1 billionth of a meter) into
materials using artificial DNA chould make it possible to tailor
the optical, electrical, mechanical, and structural properties
of new materials much more precisely, report researchers at
Northwestern University
The new procedure takes advantage of the ability of DNA to
recognize and complex to artificial or naturally occurring
sequences of nucleotides to form stable structures.
The researchers attached sequences of artificial DNA to Au
nanoparticles, and then added a complementary DNA sequence to
the solution of nanoparticles to trigger a reaction that
assembles the nanoparticles into ordered solids.
When the complementary DNA is introduced into the solution, the
color changes immediately from red to purple, which means that
the technology could also be used as a diagnostic tool for
pathogenic DNA -- visibly changing color when a particular DNA
sequence of a disease is encountered.
"We are using the exquisite molecular recognition properties of
DNA to assemble these particles into ordered, solid materials,"
said Chad Mirkin, associate professor of chemistry and leader of
the research team. "The fact that the gold particles change
color when the appropriate DNA sequence is present makes this
particularly promising for application in the biosensor arena."
The findings are an outgrowth of a collaboration between Mirkin,
who specializes in surface and materials chemistry, and Robert
Letsinger, professor emeritus of chemistry and senior research
associate. Letsinger is known as the "father of the gene
machine" for his pioneering work on the fabrication of
artificial DNA.
When the DNA strands used in this study are heated to over 42
degrees, the two strands separate. When they are cooled again,
the complementary sequences find each other and bind together
once again. In the current Northwestern research, the materials
can be assembled and disassembled by simply cooling and heating.
The first step in this research was to produce tiny particles of
gold by mixing a gold salt with a reducing agent, sodium
citrate. This results in uniform gold particles measuring just
13 nanometers in diameter. Modified artificial DNA strands
consisting of sequences of eight bases are then attached to one
group of the particles, in solution. A second set of DNA strands
that are not complementary to the first are attached to a
separate batch of particles .
Then two kinds of DNA strands consisting of 20 segments each
are added to the solution. The two strands are complementary for
12 segments, so they automatically align with each other. The
remaining eight segments align to each of the two different
sequences attached to the gold particles, and the particles are
assembled into a solid.
As soon as the linking strands are added to the solution, the
color changes from red to purple. After several hours, the
solution becomes clear and a pinkish-gray precipitate settles to
the bottom. The change in color is due to change in shape of the
particles, as they are linked together, changing their optical
properties.
The researchers say this technology can be used to "tailor the
optical, electrical and structural properties of these novel
DNA/colloidal biomaterials by controlling the choice of particle
size, shape and composition and the oligonucleotide sequence and
length."
Mirkin believes this system can be used to make materials useful
in a wide range of applications, from chemical sensors to
nanofabrication schemes and microimaging techniques.
Perhaps the most promising short-term applications, he said,
will be in medical diagnostics. Since the change in color is so
immediate and noticeable when the DNA sequences are joined, it
should be possible to design sequences that would immediately
react to the DNA of viruses and infectious diseases, making
possible a point of site diagnosis.
The research is reported in the Aug. 15 issue of the journal
Nature.
Related information on the
Internet
Dr. Mirkin's Home Page,
with Graphics.
Nanoworld
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