posted on 2016-02-09, 00:00authored byChristopher
E. Angevine, Sarah J. Seashols-Williams, Joseph E. Reiner
Temperature studies coupled with
resistive-pulse nanopore sensing
enable the quantification of a variety of important thermodynamic
properties at the single-molecule limit. Previous demonstrations of
nanopore sensing with temperature control have utilized bulk chamber
heating methodologies. This approach makes it difficult to rapidly
change temperatures and enable optical access for other analytical
techniques (i.e., single-molecule fluorescence). To address these
issues, researchers have explored laser-based methodologies through
either direct infrared (IR) absorption or plasmonic assisted heating.
In this paper, we demonstrate the use of IR-based direct absorption
heating with the DNA sensing capabilities of a biological nanopore.
The IR heating enables rapid changes of the temperature in and around
an α-hemolysin pore, and we use this to explore melting properties
for short (≤50 bp) double-stranded DNA homopolymers. We also
demonstrate that the IR heating enables one to measure the percentage
of different-sized DNA molecules in a binary mixture.