PITTSBURGH—For
the first time, a team of investigators at Carnegie
Mellon University has shown that the binding of
metal ions can mediate the formation of peptide
nucleic acid (PNA) duplexes from single strands of PNA that are only partly
complementary. This result opens new opportunities to create functional, three-dimensional
nanosize structures such as molecular-scale electronic circuits, which could
reduce by thousands of times the size of today's common electronic devices.
The research results will appear in the October 26 issue of the Journal of the
American Chemical Society.
"DNA nanotechnology has led to the construction
of sophisticated three-dimensional nanoarchitectures
composed exclusively from nucleic acid strands. These
structures can acquire a completely new set of magnetic
and electrical properties if metal ions are incorporated
in the nucleic acids at specific locations because
the metal ions have unpaired electrons," said Catalina
Achim, assistant professor of chemistry at the Mellon
College of Science. "Our goal is to harness the information
storage ability of metalcontaining PNAs to build
molecular-scale devices—tiny replicas of today's
electronic circuit components, such as wires, diodes
and transistors."
Normally, DNA occurs as the well-known double helix
first proposed by James Watson and Francis Crick
50 years ago. Each strand of the helix consists of
a backbone linked to nucleobases, which occupy the
inside of the helix. Nucleobases of one strand bind
only to specific nucleobases of a complementary strand,
and the two strands wind around one another like
a twisted ladder. Artificially manufactured PNAs
incorporate nucleobases that are bound to a backbone
chain of pseudo-amino acids, rather than the sugar-phosphate
groups of DNA.
"In modifying our PNAs so that they are significantly
more stable, we have discovered that the PNA strands
don't have to be fully complementary for a metal-containing
PNA duplex to form. This is an important finding
because it should permit us to use non-complementary
parts of the PNA duplexes to construct larger structures,
which are useful for material science applications," said
Achim.
Two years ago,
Achim was the first scientist to report the construction
of PNA duplexes that contained metal ions (nickel
ions, specifically) and ligands inserted in place
of a central nucleobases pair.
Since then, the researchers, including graduate
students and postdocs Richard Watson, Yury Skorik
and Goutam Patra, have synthesized PNAs with a variety
of ligands and metal ions to broaden the range of
thermal stability and electronic properties. By replacing
a nucleobase of a PNA with the molecule 8-hydroxyquinoline,
which readily binds to copper ions, the research
team constructed PNAs whose nucleic acid strands
are only partly complementary and found that these
duplexes are held together by standard Watson-Crick
nucleobase pairs, but also by bonds between copper
ions and the 8-hydroxyquinolines projecting from
each of the two strands.
The research was supported by the National Science
Foundation and the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation.
The Mellon College of Science at Carnegie Mellon
maintains innovative research and educational programs
in biological sciences, chemistry, physics, mathematics
and several interdisciplinary areas. For more information,
visit www.cmu.edu/mcs .
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