1.
On the Origin of Ionic Rectification in DNA-Stuffed Nanopores: The Breaking and Retrieving Symmetry.
Jiang, Y, Feng, Y, Su, J, Nie, J, Cao, L, Mao, L, Jiang, L, Guo, W
Journal of the American Chemical Society. 2017;(51):18739-18746
Abstract
The discovery of ionic current rectification (ICR) phenomena in synthetic nanofluidic systems elicits broad interest from interdisciplinary fields of chemistry, physics, materials science, and nanotechnology; and thus, boosts their applications in, for example, chemical sensing, fluidic pumping, and energy related aspects. So far, it is generally accepted that the ICR effect stems from the broken symmetry either in the nanofluidic structures, or in the environmental conditions. Although this empirical regularity is supported by numerous experimental and theoretical results, great challenge still remains to precisely figure out the correlation between the asymmetric ion transport properties and the degree of symmetry breaking. An appropriate and quantified measure is therefore highly demanded. Herein, taking DNA-stuffed nanopores as a model system, we systematically investigate the evolution of dynamic ICR in between two symmetric states. The fully stuffed and fully opened nanopores are symmetric; therefore, they exhibit linear ion transport behaviors. Once the stuffed DNA superstructures are asymmetrically removed from one end of the nanopore via aptamer-target interaction, the nanofluidic system becomes asymmetric and starts to rectify ionic current. The peak of ICR is found right before the breakthrough of the stuffed DNA forest. After that, the nanofluidic system gradually retrieves symmetry, and becomes non-rectified. Theoretical results by both the coarse-grained Poisson-Nernst-Planck model and the 1D statistic model excellently support the experimental observations, and further establish a quantified correlation between the ICR effect and the degree of asymmetry for different molecular filling configurations. Based on the ICR properties, we develop a proof-of-concept demonstration for sensing ATP, termed the ATP balance. These findings help to clarify the origin of ICR, and show implications to other asymmetric transport phenomena for future innovative nanofluidic devices and materials.
2.
Effects of engineered nanoparticles on the assembly of exopolymeric substances from phytoplankton.
Chen, CS, Anaya, JM, Zhang, S, Spurgin, J, Chuang, CY, Xu, C, Miao, AJ, Chen, EY, Schwehr, KA, Jiang, Y, et al
PloS one. 2011;(7):e21865
Abstract
The unique properties of engineered nanoparticles (ENs) that make their industrial applications so attractive simultaneously raise questions regarding their environmental safety. ENs exhibit behaviors different from bulk materials with identical chemical compositions. Though the nanotoxicity of ENs has been studied intensively, their unintended environmental impacts remain largely unknown. Herein we report experimental results of EN interactions with exopolymeric substances (EPS) from three marine phytoplankton species: Amphora sp., Ankistrodesmus angustus and Phaeodactylum tricornutum. EPS are polysaccharide-rich anionic colloid polymers released by various microorganisms that can assemble into microgels, possibly by means of hydrophobic and ionic mechanisms. Polystyrene nanoparticles (23 nm) were used in our study as model ENs. The effects of ENs on EPS assembly were monitored with dynamic laser scattering (DLS). We found that ENs can induce significant acceleration in Amphora sp. EPS assembly; after 72 hours EN-EPS aggregation reached equilibrium, forming microscopic gels of ∼4-6 µm in size. In contrast, ENs only cause moderate assembly kinetic acceleration for A. angustus and P. tricornutum EPS samples. Our results indicate that the effects of ENs on EPS assembly kinetics mainly depend on the hydrophobic interactions of ENs with EPS polymers. The cycling mechanism of EPS is complex. Nonetheless, the change of EPS assembly kinetics induced by ENs can be considered as one potential disturbance to the marine carbon cycle.