Abstract

The solution environment is of fundamental importance in the adsorption of molecules on surfaces, a process that is strongly affected by the capability of the adsorbate to disrupt the hydration layer above the surface. Here we disclose how the presence of interface water influences the adsorption mechanism of DNA nucleobases on a gold surface. By means of metadynamics simulations, we describe the distinctive features of a complex free-energy landscape for each base, which manifests activation barriers for the adsorption process. We characterize the different pathways that allow each nucleobase to overcome the barriers and be adsorbed on the surface, discussing how they influence the kinetics of adsorption of single-stranded DNA oligomers with homogeneous sequences. Our findings offer a rationale as to why experimental data on the adsorption of single-stranded homo-oligonucleotides do not straightforwardly follow the thermodynamics affinity rank.

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