Abstract

A method for the accurate determination of the melting temperature ( T m) of surface-immobilized DNA duplexes that exploits the fluorescence-quenching properties of gold is reported. A thiolated single-stranded DNA probe is chemisorbed onto a gold surface and then hybridized to a fluorophore-labeled complementary sequence. On formation of the duplex, the fluorescence of the label is effectively quenched by the gold surface. As the temperature is increased and the duplex denatures, the fluorophore label moves away from the gold surface and the fluorescence signal is again observed. The increase in fluorescence is measured as the temperature is ramped, and using first-derivative plots, the T m is determined. To demonstrate the approach, the T m of the cystic fibrosis DF508 mutation was determined in three different phases: in solution, in suspension immobilized on gold nanoparticles, and immobilized on gold film-coated substrate. The technique was further applied to optimize conditions for differentiation between a surface-immobilized DF508 mutant probe and a mutant/wild-type target exploiting increasing stringency in varying salt and formamide concentrations. The approach has application in optimization of assay conditions for biosensors that use gold substrates as well as in melting curve analysis.

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