Ren Chun-lai, Schlapak Robert, Hager Roland, Szleifer Igal, Howorka Stefan
National Laboratory of Solid State Microstructures, Department of Physics, Nanjing University , Nanjing 210093, China.
Center for Advanced Bioanalysis GmbH, Linz, Austria.
Langmuir. 2015 Oct 27;31(42):11491-501. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b02674. Epub 2015 Oct 19.
Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) nanofilms are used to avert the nonspecific binding of biomolecules on substrate surfaces in biomedicine and bioanalysis including modern fluorescence-based DNA sensing and sequencing chips. A fundamental and coherent understanding of the interactions between fluorophore-tagged DNA, PEG-films, and substrates in terms of molecular and energetic factors is, however, missing. Here we explore a large parameter space to elucidate how PEG layers passivate metal oxide surfaces against Cy3-labeled DNA probes. The driving force for probe adsorption is found to be the affinity of the fluorophore to the substrate, while the high-quality PEG films prevent adsorption to bare ITO surfaces. The amount of nonrepelled, surface-bound DNA strongly depends on oligonucleotide size, PEG chain length, and incubation temperature. To explain these observations, we develop an experimentally validated theory to provide a microscopic picture of the PEG layer and show that adsorbed DNA molecules reside within the film by end-tethering the fluorophore to the ITO surface. To compensate for the local accumulation of negatively charged DNA, counterions condense on the adsorbed probes within the layer. The model furthermore explains that surface passivation is governed by the interdependence of molecular size, conformation, charge, ion condensation, and environmental conditions. We finally report for the first time on the detailed thermodynamic values that show how adsorption results from a balance between large opposing energetic factors. The insight of our study can be applied to rationally engineer PEG nanolayers for improved functional performance in DNA analysis schemes and may be expanded to other polymeric thin films.
聚乙二醇(PEG)纳米薄膜用于避免生物医学和生物分析中生物分子在底物表面的非特异性结合,包括现代基于荧光的DNA传感和测序芯片。然而,在分子和能量因素方面,对于荧光团标记的DNA、PEG薄膜和底物之间相互作用的基本且连贯的理解尚付阙如。在此,我们探索了一个大参数空间,以阐明PEG层如何使金属氧化物表面对Cy3标记的DNA探针进行钝化。发现探针吸附的驱动力是荧光团对底物的亲和力,而高质量的PEG薄膜可防止其吸附到裸露的ITO表面。未被排斥的表面结合DNA的量强烈取决于寡核苷酸大小、PEG链长度和孵育温度。为了解释这些观察结果,我们开发了一种经过实验验证的理论,以提供PEG层的微观图像,并表明吸附的DNA分子通过将荧光团末端束缚在ITO表面而驻留在薄膜内。为了补偿带负电荷的DNA的局部积累,抗衡离子在层内吸附的探针上凝聚。该模型还解释了表面钝化受分子大小、构象、电荷、离子凝聚和环境条件之间相互依存关系的支配。我们最终首次报告了详细的热力学值,这些值显示了吸附是如何由大的相反能量因素之间的平衡产生的。我们研究的见解可应用于合理设计PEG纳米层,以在DNA分析方案中提高功能性能,并且可能扩展到其他聚合物薄膜。