Abstract

Single-molecule techniques allow for the direct observation of long-chain macromolecules, and these methods can provide a molecular understanding of chemically heterogeneous and stimuli-response polymers. In this work, we report the synthesis and direct observation of thermoresponsive DNA copolymers using single-molecule techniques. DNA-PNIPAM copolymers are synthesized using a two-step strategy based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for generating linear DNA backbones containing non-natural nucleotides (dibenzocyclooctyne-dUTP), followed by grafting thermoresponsive side branches (poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), PNIPAM) onto DNA backbones using copper-free click chemistry. Single-molecule fluorescence microscopy is used to directly observe the stretching and relaxation dynamics of DNA-PNIPAM copolymers both below and above the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PNIPAM. Our results show that the intramolecular conformational dynamics of DNA-PNIPAM copolymers are affected by temperature, branch density, and branch molecular weight. Single-molecule experiments reveal an underlying molecular heterogeneity associated with polymer stretching and relaxation behavior, which arises in part due to heterogeneous chemical identity on DNA copolymer dynamics.

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