Self-assembled monolayers of single-stranded (ss) peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) containing seven nucleotides (TTTXTTT), a C-terminus cysteine, and an N-terminus ferrocene redox group were formed on gold electrodes. The PNA monomer group (X) was selected to be either cytosine (C), thymine (T), adenine (A), guanine (G), or a methyl group (Bk). The charge transfer rate through the oligonucleotides was found to correlate with the oxidation potential of X. Kinetic measurements and computational studies of the ss-PNA fragments show that a nucleobase mediated charge transport mechanism in the deep tunneling superexchange regime can explain the observed dependence of the kinetics of charge transfer on the PNA sequence. Theoretical analysis suggests that the charge transport is dominantly hole-mediated and takes place through the filled bridge orbitals. The strongest contribution to conductance comes from the highest filled orbitals (HOMO, HOMO-1, and HOMO-2) of individual bases, with a rapid drop off in contributions from lower lying filled orbitals. Our studies further suggest that the linear correlation observed between the experimental charge transfer rates and the oxidation potential of base X arises from weak average interbase couplings and similar stacking geometries for the four TTTXTTT systems.
The synthesis and photophysical properties of a series of naphthalene-containing solvatochromic fluorophores are described within. These novel fluorophores are prepared using a microwave-assisted dehydrogenative Diels-Alder reaction of styrene, followed by a palladium-catalyzed cross coupling reaction to install an electron donating amine group. The new fluorophores are structurally related to Prodan. Photophysical properties of the new fluorophores were studied and intriguing solvatochromic behavior was observed. For most of these fluorophores, high quantum yields (60-99%) were observed in methylene chloride in addition to large Stokes shifts (95-226 nm) in this same solvent. As the solvent polarity increased, so did the observed Stokes shift with one derivative displaying a Stokes shift of ~300 nm in ethanol. All fluorophore emission maxima, and nearly all absorption maxima were significantly red-shifted when compared to Prodan. Shifting the absorption and emission maxima of a fluorophore into the visible region increases its utility in biological applications. Moreover, the cyclopentane portion of the fluorophore structure provides an attachment point for biomolecules that will minimize disruptions of the photophysical properties.
We present evidence for a near-resonant mechanism of charge transfer in short peptide nucleic acid (PNA) duplexes obtained through electrochemical, STM break junction (STM-BJ), and computational studies. A seven base pair (7-bp) PNA duplex with the sequence (TA)(3)-(XY)-(TA)(3) was studied, in which XY is a complementary nucleobase pair. The experiments showed that the heterogeneous charge transfer rate constant (k(0)) and the single-molecule conductance (σ) correlate with the oxidation potential of the purine base in the XY base pair. The electrochemical measurements showed that the enhancement of k(0) is independent, within experimental error, of which of the two PNA strands contains the purine base of the XY base pair. 7-bp PNA duplexes with one or two GC base pairs had similar measured k(0) and conductance values. While a simple superexchange model, previously used to rationalize charge transfer in single stranded PNA (Paul et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2009, 131, 6498-6507), describes some of the experimental observations, the model does not explain the absence of an enhancement in the experimental k(0) and σ upon increasing the G content in the duplexes from one to two. Moreover, the superexchange model is not consistent with other studies (Paul et al. J. Phys. Chem. B 2010, 114, 14140), that showed a hopping charge transport mechanism is likely important for PNA duplexes longer than seven base pairs. A quantitative computational analysis shows that a near-resonant charge transfer regime, wherein a mix of superexchange and hopping mechanisms are expected to coexist, can rationalize all of the experimental results.
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