Surface-enhanced Raman scattering used to study the structure of layers formed on metal surfaces from single-stranded DNA and 6-mercaptohexan-1-ol: influence of hybridization with the complementary DNA and influence of the metal substrate.
Aleksandra MichałowskaAleksandra GajdaAgata KowalczykJan L WeyherAnna Maria NowickaAndrzej KudelskiPublished in: RSC advances (2022)
Capture single-stranded DNA with an attached alkanethiol linking moiety (capture HS-ssDNA) and 6-mercaptohexan-1-ol were chemisorbed on nanostructured GaN covered with sputtered layers of plasmonic metals (like silver and gold). The structure of the formed layer was determined by surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) measurements. Hybridization with the target ssDNA, complementary to the chains of immobilized capture HS-ssDNA, induced changes in the conformation of the chains of chemisorbed ω-substituted alkanetiols (6-mercaptohexan-1-ol and the alkanethiol linking moiety of HS-ssDNA). Such changes are significantly larger in the case of experiments on silver than on gold and gold/silver SERS substrates. This means that silver substrates are significantly more promising for the SERS observation of such hybridization-induced rearrangements than the gold substrates previously used. Although the sputtered metal films have a nanograin structure, the nanostructuring of the GaN substrates plays an important role in the SERS-activity of this nanomaterial.
Keyphrases
- gold nanoparticles
- single molecule
- nucleic acid
- silver nanoparticles
- circulating tumor
- label free
- sensitive detection
- cell free
- raman spectroscopy
- binding protein
- diabetic rats
- molecular docking
- oxidative stress
- climate change
- molecular dynamics simulations
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- quantum dots
- health risk
- drinking water
- candida albicans
- health risk assessment