Abstract

Selective modulation of near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) is important for their applications as NIR optical sensors and devices. Here we present the target molecule-mediated NIR fluorescence modulation of refolded DNA aptamer-functionalized SWNTs, using platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and a PDGF-binding aptamer as a model system. The aptamer–SWNT complexes use SWNT as nanoscale NIR optical emitters and DNA aptamers as molecular recognition elements. The binding of target molecules, PDGFs in this study, to PDGF-binding aptamers on the surface of SWNTs induces a conformation change of the aptamers, which modulates the NIR fluorescence of SWNT emitters. This study suggests that PDGF-binding aptamers noncovalently assembled on the SWNT surface can undergo a temperature and divalent ion-induced conformational change into a folded structure through multiple stages, which renders aptamer-functionalized SWNTs optically responsive to target molecules. In addition, our experimental and theoretical results show that the aptamers have a nanotube diameter-dependent affinity for SWNTs. We demonstrate that refolded aptamer-functionalized SWNTs reversibly modulate their NIR fluorescence in response to PDGF at the nanomolar range of 0.1 to 10 nM with apparent dissociation constants of ~0.71 nM (solution-phase complexes) and ~3.1 nM (complexes in hydrogels). This study could open new opportunities to design label-free, reversible NIR optical sensors that can detect various target molecules.

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