A team of researchers from Duke University and Arizona State University has shown how specific DNA sequences can turn these
The results may provide a framework for engineering more stable, efficient and tunable DNA nanoscale devices, and for understanding how DNA conductivity might be used to identify gene damage. The study appears online June 20 in Nature Chemistry.
Scientists have long disagreed over exactly how electrons travel along strands of DNA, says David N. Beratan, professor of chemistry at Duke University and leader of the Duke team. Over longer distances, they believe electrons travel along DNA strands like particles, «hopping» from one molecular base or «unit» to the next. Over shorter distances, the electrons use their wave character, being shared or «smeared out» over multiple bases at once.
But recent experiments lead by Nongjian Tao, professor of electrical engineering at Arizona State University and
This result was intriguing, says Duke graduate student and study lead author Chaoren Liu, because electrons that travel in waves are essentially entering the «fast lane," moving with more efficiency than those that hop.
«In our studies, we first wanted to confirm that this
DNA strands are built like chains, with each link comprising one of four molecular bases whose sequence codes the genetic instructions for our cells. Using computer simulations, Beratan’s team found that manipulating these same sequences could tune the degree of electron sharing between bases, leading to
The team theorizes that creating these blocks of G bases causes them to all «lock» together so the
«We can think of the bases being effectively linked together so they all move as one," Liu said. «This helps the electron be shared within the blocks.»
The Tao group confirmed these theoretical predictions using break junction experiments, tethering short DNA strands built from alternating blocks of three to eight guanine bases between two gold electrodes and measuring the amount of electrical charge flowing through the molecules.
The results shed light on a
«This theoretical framework shows us that the exact sequence of the DNA helps dictate whether electrons might travel like particles, and when they might travel like waves," Beratan said. «You could say we are engineering the
Other authors include Yuqi Zhang and Peng Zhang of Duke University and Limin Xiang and Yueqi Li of Arizona State University.
Source: http://today.duke.edu/2016/06/conductivity