| Literature DB >> 22609769 |
Shuai Chang1, Shuo Huang, Hao Liu, Peiming Zhang, Feng Liang, Rena Akahori, Shengqin Li, Brett Gyarfas, John Shumway, Brian Ashcroft, Jin He, Stuart Lindsay.
Abstract
4(5)-(2-mercaptoethyl)-1H-imidazole-2-carboxamide is a molecule that has multiple hydrogen bonding sites and a short flexible linker. When tethered to a pair of electrodes, it traps target molecules in a tunnel junction. Surprisingly large recognition-tunneling signals are generated for all naturally occurring DNA bases A, C, G, T and 5-methyl-cytosine. Tunnel current spikes are stochastic and broadly distributed, but characteristic enough so that individual bases can be identified as a tunneling probe is scanned over DNA oligomers. Each base yields a recognizable burst of signal, the duration of which is controlled entirely by the probe speed, down to speeds of 1 nm s -1, implying a maximum off-rate of 3 s -1 for the recognition complex. The same measurements yield a lower bound on the on-rate of 1 M -1 s -1. Despite the stochastic nature of the signals, an optimized multiparameter fit allows base calling from a single signal peak with an accuracy that can exceed 80% when a single type of nucleotide is present in the junction, meaning that recognition-tunneling is capable of true single-molecule analysis. The accuracy increases to 95% when multiple spikes in a signal cluster are analyzed.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22609769 PMCID: PMC3392519 DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/23/23/235101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874