| Literature DB >> 19420603 |
Shuai Chang1, Jin He, Lisha Lin, Peiming Zhang, Feng Liang, Michael Young, Shuo Huang, Stuart Lindsay.
Abstract
The use of tunneling signals to sequence DNA is presently hampered by the small tunnel conductance of a junction spanning an entire DNA molecule. The design of a readout system that uses a shorter tunneling path requires knowledge of the absolute conductance across base pairs. We have exploited the stochastic switching of hydrogen-bonded DNA base-nucleoside pairs trapped in a tunnel junction to determine the conductance of individual molecular pairs. This conductance is found to be sensitive to the geometry of the junction, but a subset of the data appears to come from unstrained molecular pairs. The conductances determined from these pairs are within a factor of two of the predictions of density functional calculations. The experimental data reproduces the counterintuitive theoretical prediction that guanine-deoxycytidine pairs (3 H-bonds) have a smaller conductance than adenine-thymine pairs (2 H-bonds). A bimodal distribution of switching lifetimes shows that both H-bonds and molecule-metal contacts break.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19420603 PMCID: PMC2694950 DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/20/18/185102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874