Here we described the preparation and characterization by atomic force microscopy of dumbbell-shaped conjugates between 450 bp double-stranded DNA polymer, poly(dG)-poly(dC), and 5 nm gold nanoparticles (GNPs). We have demonstrated that the size of the nanoparticles in the conjugates can be increased in a controlled fashion. Application of the conjugates for measuring the electrical conductivity of DNA is discussed.
Here, we report synthesis of long (thousands of base pairs), uniform double-stranded (ds) DNA comprising short (6−15 base pairs) tandem repeats. The synthesis method is based on self-assembly of short (6− 15 bases) half-complementary 5′-end phosphorylated single-stranded oligonucleotides into long ds polymer molecules and covalent association of the oligonucleotide fragments in the polymer by DNA ligase to yield complete non-nicked ds DNA. The method is very flexible in regard to the sequence of the oligonucleotides and their length. Human telomeric DNA comprising thousands of base pairs as well as methylated, mismatched, and fluorescent dye-modified uniform dsDNA molecules can be synthesized. We have demonstrated by high resolution frequency-modulation atomic force microscopy that the structure of DNA containing mismatches is strongly different from that of the non-mismatched one. The DNA molecules comprising groups capable of anchoring metal particles and other redox active elements along the whole length of the nucleic acid polymer should find use as wires or transistors in future nanoelectronic applications.
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