Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
866581 Biosensors and Bioelectronics 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We monitor the entire process of surface-initiated DNA hybridization chain reaction (HCR) in real.•We present the accurate values of HCR efficiency on solid–liquid interface for the first time.•HCR efficiency was low than that for HCR in solution because the formed long dsDNA lay on the chip surface.•The HCR efficiency increases with increased salt concentration.•The immobilization position of initiator ssDNA dramatically affects the HCR efficiency.

In this study we used dual-polarization interferometry to investigate DNA hybridization chain reactions (HCRs) at solid–liquid interfaces. We monitored the effects of variations in mass, thickness, and density of the immobilized initiator on the subsequent HCRs at various salt concentrations. At low salt concentrations, the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) initiator was attached uniformly to the chip surface. At high salt concentrations, it lay on the surface at the onset of the immobilization process, but the approaching ssDNA forced the pre-immobilized ssDNA strands to extend into solution as a result of increased electrostatic repulsion between the pre-adsorbed and approaching ssDNA chains. Injection of a mixture of H1 and H2 increased the mass and thickness of the films initially, but thereafter the thickness decreased. These changes indicate that the long double-stranded DNA that formed lay on the surface, rather than extended into the solution, thereby suppressing the subsequent initiation activity of the released single-strand parts of H1 and H2. Increasing the salt concentration increased the HCR efficiency and reaction rate. The HCR efficiency of the initiator ssDNA immobilized on its 5′ end was higher than that immobilized on its 3′ end, suggesting that the released single-strand parts of H1 and H2 close to the chip surface decreased the initiation activity relative to those of the ones extending into solution.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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