ABSTRACT
This paper examines the contribution of counterion motion to the electric-field dynamics in the interior of DNA. The electric field is measured by a coumarin fluorophore that is synthetically incorporated into an oligonucleotide, where it replaces a native base pair. The DNA is a 17-base-pair oligomer with no A- or G-tracts. Time-resolved Stokes-shift measurements on the coumarin are made from 40 ps to 40 ns with each of the alkali ions and or one of several tetraalkylammonium ions as the DNA counterion. With the possible exception of rubidium, there are no indications of site-specific binding of the counterions. For sodium and other ions with a smaller hydrodynamic radius, the dynamics are identical and are fit to a power law. For larger ions, there is a progressive increase in the rate of shifting after 1 ns. This effect correlates with the hydrodynamic radius of the counterion. The lack of change in the spectral shape of the emission shows that neither the broadly distributed power-law relaxation nor the extra nanosecond dynamics are due to heterogeneity in the relaxation rates of different helices.
Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Base Sequence , Ions , Reproducibility of ResultsABSTRACT
Silver and gold nanorods with aspect ratios from 1 to 16 have been used as substrates for surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) in colloidal solution. The nanorod aspect ratio is varied to give different degrees of overlap between the nanorod longitudinal plasmon band and excitation source in order to determine its effect on overall surface enhancement. Results suggest that enhancement factors are a factor of 10-10(2) greater for substrates that have plasmon band overlap with the excitation source than for substrates whose plasmon bands do not.
Subject(s)
Gold/chemistry , Nanotechnology , Silver/chemistry , Spectrum Analysis, Raman/methods , Colloids/chemistry , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Particle Size , Solutions/chemistry , Surface PropertiesABSTRACT
Synthetic oligonucleotides with a fluorescent coumarin group replacing a basepair have been used in recent time-resolved Stokes-shift experiments to measure DNA dynamics on the femtosecond to nanosecond timescales. Here, we show that the APE1 endonuclease cleaves such a modified oligonucleotide at the abasic site opposite the coumarin with only a fourfold reduction in rate. In addition, a noncatalytic mutant (D210N) binds tightly to the same oligonucleotide, albeit with an 85-fold reduction in binding constant relative to a native oligonucleotide containing a guanine opposite the abasic site. Thus, the modified oligonucleotide retains substantial biological activity and serves as a useful model of native DNA. In the complex of the coumarin-containing oligonucleotide and the noncatalytic APE1, the dye's absorption spectrum is shifted relative to its spectrum in either water or within the unbound oligonucleotide. Thus the dye occupies a site within the DNA:protein complex. This result is consistent with modeling, which shows that the complex accommodates coumarin at the site of the orphaned base with little distortion of the native structure. Stokes-shift measurements of the complex show surprisingly little change in the dynamics within the 40 ps-40 ns time range.
Subject(s)
Aminopeptidases/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/chemistry , Spectrometry, Fluorescence/methods , Binding Sites , Computer Simulation , DNA/ultrastructure , DNA-Binding Proteins/chemistry , Kinetics , Molecular Conformation , Protein Binding , Time FactorsABSTRACT
Arc-synthesized single-walled carbon nanotubes have been purified through preparative electrophoresis in agarose gel and glass bead matrixes. Two major impurities were isolated: fluorescent carbon and short tubular carbon. Analysis of these two classes of impurities was done. The methods described may be readily extended to the separation of other water-soluble nanoparticles. The separated fluorescent carbon and short tubule carbon species promise to be interesting nanomaterials in their own right.
ABSTRACT
The nature of the counterion is shown to have a pronounced effect on the apparent dynamic polarity in the interior of DNA. Time-resolved Stokes-shift measurements in the 80 ps to 40 ns time range were made on a polarity-sensitive fluorophore (coumarin 102) that replaces a base pair in an oligonucleotide. With sodium counterions, the emission spectrum narrows with time, whereas with tetrabutylammonium counterions, it does not. Our interpretation is that a subpopulation of helices have sodium cations bound in a fashion that slows the normal dynamics.