Regulation of Catalytic DNA Activities with Thermosensitive
Gold Nanoparticle Surfaces
Version 2 2018-10-16, 17:25Version 2 2018-10-16, 17:25
Version 1 2018-10-16, 17:23Version 1 2018-10-16, 17:23
Posted on 2018-10-16 - 17:25
The regulation of the activities
of catalytic DNA is of great importance
in many applications, especially in biosensing, controllable drug
carriers, and gene therapy. In this work, the surfaces of gold nanoparticles
(AuNPs) are simultaneously modified with a thermoresponsive polymer,
poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAM), and catalytic
DNA to form thermosensitive catalytic DNA/pNIPAM/AuNP systems. The
thermosensitive pNIPAM on the surfaces of AuNPs enables the temperature-controlled
catalytic activities of the system in a narrow temperature range.
The catalytic DNA/pNIPAM/AuNP system exhibits almost no catalytic
activity at temperatures below the lower critical solution temperature
(LCST) of pNIPAM and become highly catalytic when the temperature
is higher than the LCST. Two kinds of catalytic DNA, the entropy-driven
DNA catalytic network and the Mg2+-dependent DNAzyme, were
chosen as model catalytic systems, and the results showed that the
regulation of catalytic activities for both systems was achieved efficiently.
These systems may have important potentials in future biosensing and
biomedical applications.
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Li, Fengyun; Gao, Qi; Yang, Mingjie; Guo, Weiwei (2018). Regulation of Catalytic DNA Activities with Thermosensitive
Gold Nanoparticle Surfaces. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b02149