Issue 36, 2024

Quantitative measurement of cation-mediated adhesion of DNA to anionic surfaces

Abstract

Anionic polyelectrolytes, such as DNA, are attracted to anionic surfaces in the presence of multivalent cations. A major barrier toward molecular-level understanding of these attractive interactions is the paucity of measurements of the binding strength. Here, atomic force microscopy-based single molecule force spectroscopy was used to quantify the binding free energy of double-stranded DNA to an anionic surface, with complementary density functional theory calculations of the binding energies of metal ion–ligand complexes. The results support both electrostatic attraction and ion-specific binding. Our study suggests that the correlated interactions between counterions are responsible for attraction between DNA and an anionic surface, but the strength of this attraction is modulated by the identity of the metal ion. We propose a mechanism in which the strength of metal–ligand binding, as well as the preference for particular binding sites, influence both the concentration dependence and the strength of the DNA–surface interactions.

Graphical abstract: Quantitative measurement of cation-mediated adhesion of DNA to anionic surfaces

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Dec 2023
Accepted
27 Jul 2024
First published
30 Jul 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 7147-7156

Quantitative measurement of cation-mediated adhesion of DNA to anionic surfaces

X. Hao, Q. Gu, C. Isborn, J. R. Vasquez, M. P. Long and T. Ye, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 7147 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM01733H

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