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Chemical Mapping of Unstained DNA Origami Using...
Journal article

Chemical Mapping of Unstained DNA Origami Using STEM/EDS and Graphene Supports

Abstract

We demonstrate that unstained DNA nanostructures can be chemically mapped by using aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). Key to this measurement is the use of graphene supports whose reduced background scattering compared to thicker carbon supports allows EDS to image phosphorus and other elements in the DNA (or in attachments to the DNA) as well as to see the divalent cations used to stabilize the nanostructure. In addition, unlike in other EDS analyses, the chemical maps we obtain can be made quantitative in an absolute sense because each individual DNA nanostructure is in effect a very large macromolecule (∼4.7 MDa) with a known chemical composition. In this way, not only can STEM/EDS serve DNA nanotechnology as a characterization tool but also the DNA structures can function as molecular standards for improving mesoscale EDS techniques.

Authors

Brintlinger TH; Buckhout-White S; Bassim ND; Mathur D; Samanta A; Robinson JT; Idrobo J-C; Stroud RM; Goldman ER; Ancona MG

Journal

ACS Applied Nano Materials, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 1123–1130

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

February 28, 2020

DOI

10.1021/acsanm.9b02574

ISSN

2574-0970

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