DocumentCode
859306
Title
Dielectrophoretic manipulation of surface-bound DNA
Author
Germishuizen, W.A. ; Wälti, C. ; Tosch, P. ; Wirtz, R. ; Pepper, M. ; Davies, A.G. ; Middelberg, A.P.J.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Chem. Eng., Univ. of Cambridge, UK
Volume
150
Issue
2
fYear
2003
Firstpage
54
Lastpage
58
Abstract
Dielectrophoretic manipulation enables the positioning and orientation of DNA molecules for nanometer-scale applications. However, the dependence of the dielectrophoretic force and torque on the electric field magnitude and frequency has to be well characterised to realise fully the potential of this technique. DNA in solution is attracted to the strongest electric field gradient (i.e. the electrode edge) as a result of the dielectrophoretic force, while the dielectrophoretic torque aligns the DNA with its longest axis parallel to the electric field. In this work, the authors attached λ-DNA fragments (48 and 25 kilobases) to an array of gold microelectrodes via a terminal thiol bond and characterised the orientation and elongation as a function of electric field magnitude (0.1-0.8 MV/m) and frequency (0.08-1.1 MHz). Maximum elongation was observed between 200 and 500 kHz for the attached DNA. Dielectrophoresis is limited by thermal randomisation at electric fields below 0.1 MV/m and by electrothermal effects above 0.7 MV/m. The authors conclude that dielectrophoresis can be used to manipulate surface-immobilised DNA reproducibly.
Keywords
DNA; bioelectric phenomena; biological techniques; electrophoresis; elongation; microelectrodes; molecular biophysics; nanopositioning; torque; λ-DNA fragments; 0.08 to 1.1 MHz; 200 to 500 kHz; Au; DNA molecules; attached DNA; bioanalytical systems; dielectrophoretic force; dielectrophoretic manipulation; dielectrophoretic torque; electric field; electric field gradient; electric field magnitude; electrode edge; electrothermal effects; elongation; frequency; gold microelectrode array; longest axis; molecular electronic devices; nanometer-scale applications; orientation; positioning; surface-bound DNA; surface-immobilised DNA; terminal thiol bond; thermal randomisation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nanobiotechnology, IEE Proceedings -
Publisher
iet
ISSN
1478-1581
Type
jour
DOI
10.1049/ip-nbt:20031080
Filename
1260174
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