Fluorescent DNA-stabilized silver nanoclusters contain both cationic and neutral silver atoms. The absorbance spectra of compositionally pure solutions follow the trend expected for rod-shaped silver clusters, consistent with the polarized emission measured from individual nanoclusters. The data suggest a rod-like assembly of silver atoms, with silver cations mediating attachment to the bases.
DNA-stabilized silver clusters are
remarkable for the selection
of fluorescence color by the sequence of the stabilizing DNA oligomer.
Yet despite a growing number of applications that exploit this property,
no large-scale studies have probed origins of cluster color or whether
certain colors occur more frequently than others. Here we employ a
set of 684 randomly chosen 10-base oligomers to address these questions.
Rather than a flat distribution, we find that specific color bands
dominate. Cluster size data indicate that these “magic colors”
originate from the existence of magic numbers for DNA-stabilized silver
clusters, which differ from those of spheroidal gold clusters stabilized
by small-molecule ligands. Elongated cluster structures, enforced
by multiple base ligands along the DNA, can account for both magic
number sizes and color variation around peak wavelength populations.
Discriminative base motifs within DNA templates for fluorescent silver clusters are identified using methods that combine large experimental data sets with machine learning tools for pattern recognition. Combining the discovery of certain multibase motifs important for determining fluorescence brightness with a generative algorithm, the probability of selecting DNA templates that stabilize fluorescent silver clusters is increased by a factor of >3.
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