Issue 6, 2024

Controlling the size and adhesion of DNA droplets using surface- enriched DNA molecules

Abstract

Liquid droplets of biomolecules serve as organizers of the cellular interior and are of interest in biosensing and biomaterials applications. Here, we investigate means to tune the interfacial properties of a model biomolecular liquid consisting of multi-armed DNA 'nanostar' particles. We find that long DNA molecules that have binding affinity for the nanostars are preferentially enriched on the interface of nanostar droplets, thus acting as surfactants. Fluorescent measurements indicate that, in certain conditions, the interfacial density of the surfactant is around 20 per square micron, indicative of a sparse brush-like structure of the long, polymeric DNA. Increasing surfactant concentration leads to decreased droplet size, down to the sub-micron scale, consistent with droplet coalesence being impeded by the disjoining pressure created by the brush-like surfactant layer. Added DNA surfactant also keeps droplets from adhering to both hydrophobic and hydrophilic solid surfaces, apparently due to this same disjoining effect of the surfactant layer. We thus demonstrate control of the size and adhesive properties of droplets of a biomolecular liquid, with implications for basic biophysical understanding of such droplets, as well as for their applied use.

Graphical abstract: Controlling the size and adhesion of DNA droplets using surface- enriched DNA molecules

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Sep 2023
Accepted
06 Jan 2024
First published
10 Jan 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 1275-1281

Controlling the size and adhesion of DNA droplets using surface- enriched DNA molecules

D. Gao, S. Wilken, A. B. N. Nguyen, G. R. Abraham, T. Liedl and O. A. Saleh, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 1275 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM01264F

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