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High-Precision Electrochemical Measurements of the Guanine-, Mismatch-, and Length-Dependence of Electron Transfer from Electrode-Bound DNA Are Consistent with a Contact-Mediated Mechanism.

Philippe Dauphin-DucharmeNetzahualcóyotl Arroyo-CurrásKevin William Plaxco
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2019)
Despite 25 years' effort, serious questions remain regarding the mechanism(s) underlying electron transfer through (or from) electrode-bound double-stranded DNA. In part this is because a control experiment regarding the putatively critical role of guanine bases in the most widely proposed transport mechanism (hopping from guanine to guanine through the π-stack) appears to be lacking from the prior literature. In response, we have employed chronoamperometry, which allows for high-precision determination of electron transfer rates, to characterize transfer to a redox reporter appended onto electrode-bound DNA duplexes. Specifically, we have measured the effects of guanines and base mismatches on the electron transfer rate associated with such constructs. Upon doing so, we find that, counter to prior reports, the transfer rate is, to within relatively tight experimental confidence intervals, unaffected by either. Parallel studies of the dependence of the electron transfer rate on the length of the DNA suggest that transfer from this system obeys a "collision" mechanism in which the redox reporter physically contacts the electrode surface prior to the exchange of electrons.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • circulating tumor
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • nucleic acid
  • carbon nanotubes
  • crispr cas
  • solid state
  • circulating tumor cells
  • molecularly imprinted
  • high resolution
  • liquid chromatography