Abstract
Surface immobilization of DNA for biosensing or separations applications requires covalent attachment chemistry that is efficient, reproducible, and stable. In this work, an approach to link thiol-functionalized DNA to thiol-modified silica surfaces using N,N’-1,4-phenylene-bismaleimide is optimized by developing an efficient, one-pot synthesis of the maleimide-conjugated DNA followed by its immediate reaction with thiolated porous silica particles. The methodology takes advantage of a Michael addition reaction that couples a phenyl–bismaleimide cross-linking reagent and thiol-modified DNA to form a monomeric DNA-maleimide conjugate. The 1:1 stoichiometry of this reaction must be carefully controlled to avoid excess thiol-DNA, which generates unreactive bismaleimide-linked DNA dimers, or excess bismaleimide, which competes with the DNA-maleimide conjugate for reaction with the thiolated silica surface. To achieve control over the reaction forming the DNA conjugate, we adapt a fluorescence assay for free-thiols using 7-diethylamino-3-(4-maleimidophenyl)-4-methylcoumarin (CPM) to determine the concentration of thiol-modified DNA that emerges from its synthesis, disulfide labeling, reduction to a thiol, and purification. The fluorescence response of the CPM reagent was calibrated using reduced glutathione as a standard, which allowed determination of the concentrations of thiolated-DNA and control over the stoichiometry of its reaction with a bismaleimide linker. The maleimide-conjugated DNA product thus formed was then reacted with thiolated-silica in order to bind the DNA to the internal surfaces of porous silica, whose surface populations were determined in individual particles by confocal Raman microscopy. Self-modeling curve resolution of the Raman spectra of surface-bound molecules validated the efficiency of the bismaleimide:thiolated DNA reaction, which provided stoichiometric control over formation of the monomeric DNA-maleimide conjugate and its optimized reaction with thiolated-silica surfaces.
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