Literature DB >> 16518776

Influence of electric field intensity, ionic strength, and migration distance on the mobility and diffusion in DNA surface electrophoresis.

Bingquan Li1, Xiaohua Fang, Haobin Luo, Eric Petersen, Young-Soo Seo, Vladimir Samuilov, Miriam Rafailovich, Jonathan Sokolov, Dilip Gersappe, Benjamin Chu.   

Abstract

In order to increase the separation rate of surface electrophoresis while preserving the resolution for large DNA chains, e.g., genomic DNA, the mobility and diffusion of Lambda DNA chains adsorbed on flat silicon substrate under an applied electric field, as a function of migration distance, ionic strength, and field intensity, were studied using laser fluorescence microscope. The mobility was found to follow a power law with the field intensity beyond a certain threshold. The detected DNA peak width was shown to be constant with migration distance, slightly smaller with stronger field intensity, but significantly decreased with higher ionic strength. The molecular dynamics simulation demonstrated that the peak width was strongly related with the conformation of DNA chains adsorbed onto surface. The results also implied that there was no diffusion of DNA during migration on surface. Therefore, the Nernst-Einstein relation is not valid in the surface electrophoresis and the separation rate could be improved without losing resolution by decreasing separation distance, increasing buffer concentration, and field intensity. The results indicate the fast separation of genomic DNA chains by surface electrophoresis is possible.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16518776     DOI: 10.1002/elps.200500444

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Electrophoresis        ISSN: 0173-0835            Impact factor:   3.535


  3 in total

Review 1.  Beyond gel electrophoresis: microfluidic separations, fluorescence burst analysis, and DNA stretching.

Authors:  Kevin D Dorfman; Scott B King; Daniel W Olson; Joel D P Thomas; Douglas R Tree
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2012-11-12       Impact factor: 60.622

2.  Beyond the Debye length in high ionic strength solution: direct protein detection with field-effect transistors (FETs) in human serum.

Authors:  Chia-Ho Chu; Indu Sarangadharan; Abiral Regmi; Yen-Wen Chen; Chen-Pin Hsu; Wen-Hsin Chang; Geng-Yen Lee; Jen-Inn Chyi; Chih-Chen Chen; Shu-Chu Shiesh; Gwo-Bin Lee; Yu-Lin Wang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-07-12       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  High-field modulated ion-selective field-effect-transistor (FET) sensors with sensitivity higher than the ideal Nernst sensitivity.

Authors:  Yi-Ting Chen; Indu Sarangadharan; Revathi Sukesan; Ching-Yen Hseih; Geng-Yen Lee; Jen-Inn Chyi; Yu-Lin Wang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-05-29       Impact factor: 4.379

  3 in total

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