Abstract

Condensation of DNA–carbon nanotube (CNT) hybrids dispersed in aqueous solutions can be induced by elevated hybrid concentrations, salts, or crowding agents. DNA–CNT condensates exhibit either nematic ordering or amorphous aggregates, dependent on the nature of interhybrid interactions. This study employed X-ray diffraction (XRD) to determine nanoscale structures of the condensates, including the presence of positional ordering, interaxial distances, and the range of ordered domains. To probe the effects of DNA sequence, two types of CNT hybrids, dispersed by genomic DNA of random sequence and synthetic oligonucleotides respectively, were studied under identical conditions. The osmotic stress method was further used to quantify force–distance dependencies of the DNA–CNT hybrids to elucidate the relation between interhybrid interactions and condensate structures. We observed that, independent of DNA sequence, lyotropic DNA–CNT phases showed weak positional ordering with long interhybrid distances, salt-ind...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call