Endohedral confinement of a DNA dodecamer onto pristine carbon nanotubes and the stability of the canonical B form
Abstract
Although carbon nanotubes are potential candidates for DNA encapsulation and subsequent delivery of biological payloads to living cells, the thermodynamical spontaneity of DNA encapsulation under physiological conditions is still a matter of debate. Using enhanced sampling techniques, we show for the first time that, given a sufficiently large carbon nanotube, the confinement of a double-stranded DNA segment, 5'-D(*CP*GP*CP*GP*AP*AP*TP*TP*CP*GP*CP*G)-3', is thermodynamically favourable under physiological environments (134 mM, 310 K, 1 bar), leading to DNA-nanotube hybrids with lower free energy than the unconfined biomolecule. A diameter threshold of 3 nm is established below which encapsulation is inhibited. The confined DNA segment maintains its translational mobility and exhibits the main geometrical features of the canonical B form. To accommodate itself within the nanopore, the DNA's end-to-end length increases from 3.85 nm up to approximately 4.1 nm, due to a ∼0.3 nm elastic expansion of the strand termini. The canonical Watson-Crick H-bond network is essentially conserved throughout encapsulation, showing that the contact between the DNA segment and the hydrophobic carbon walls results in minor rearrangements of the nucleotides H-bonding. The results obtained here are paramount to the usage of carbon nanotubes as encapsulation media for next generation drug delivery technologies.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Chemical Physics
- Pub Date:
- June 2014
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1605.01317
- Bibcode:
- 2014JChPh.140v5103C
- Keywords:
-
- Physics - Biological Physics;
- Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics;
- Physics - Chemical Physics;
- Quantitative Biology - Biomolecules
- E-Print:
- J. Chem. Phys. 140, 225103 (2014)