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Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity

[Image: see text] DNA-templated molecular (dye) aggregates are a novel class of materials that have garnered attention in a broad range of areas including light harvesting, sensing, and computing. Using DNA to template dye aggregation is attractive due to the relative ease with which DNA nanostructu...

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Autores principales: Huff, Jonathan S., Turner, Daniel B., Mass, Olga A., Patten, Lance K., Wilson, Christopher K., Roy, Simon K., Barclay, Matthew S., Yurke, Bernard, Knowlton, William B., Davis, Paul H., Pensack, Ryan D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8450906/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34473494
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c04517
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author Huff, Jonathan S.
Turner, Daniel B.
Mass, Olga A.
Patten, Lance K.
Wilson, Christopher K.
Roy, Simon K.
Barclay, Matthew S.
Yurke, Bernard
Knowlton, William B.
Davis, Paul H.
Pensack, Ryan D.
author_facet Huff, Jonathan S.
Turner, Daniel B.
Mass, Olga A.
Patten, Lance K.
Wilson, Christopher K.
Roy, Simon K.
Barclay, Matthew S.
Yurke, Bernard
Knowlton, William B.
Davis, Paul H.
Pensack, Ryan D.
author_sort Huff, Jonathan S.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] DNA-templated molecular (dye) aggregates are a novel class of materials that have garnered attention in a broad range of areas including light harvesting, sensing, and computing. Using DNA to template dye aggregation is attractive due to the relative ease with which DNA nanostructures can be assembled in solution, the diverse array of nanostructures that can be assembled, and the ability to precisely position dyes to within a few Angstroms of one another. These factors, combined with the programmability of DNA, raise the prospect of designer materials custom tailored for specific applications. Although considerable progress has been made in characterizing the optical properties and associated electronic structures of these materials, less is known about their excited-state dynamics. For example, little is known about how the excited-state lifetime, a parameter essential to many applications, is influenced by structural factors, such as the number of dyes within the aggregate and their spatial arrangement. In this work, we use a combination of transient absorption spectroscopy and global target analysis to measure excited-state lifetimes in a series of DNA-templated cyanine dye aggregates. Specifically, we investigate six distinct dimer, trimer, and tetramer aggregates—based on the ubiquitous cyanine dye Cy5—templated using both duplex and Holliday junction DNA nanostructures. We find that these DNA-templated Cy5 aggregates all exhibit significantly reduced excited-state lifetimes, some by more than 2 orders of magnitude, and observe considerable variation among the lifetimes. We attribute the reduced excited-state lifetimes to enhanced nonradiative decay and proceed to discuss various structural factors, including exciton delocalization, dye separation, and DNA heterogeneity, that may contribute to the observed reduction and variability of excited-state lifetimes. Guided by insights from structural modeling, we find that the reduced lifetimes and enhanced nonradiative decay are most strongly correlated with the distance between the dyes. These results inform potential tradeoffs between dye separation, excitonic coupling strength, and excited-state lifetime that motivate deeper mechanistic understanding, potentially via further dye and dye template design.
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spelling pubmed-84509062021-09-21 Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity Huff, Jonathan S. Turner, Daniel B. Mass, Olga A. Patten, Lance K. Wilson, Christopher K. Roy, Simon K. Barclay, Matthew S. Yurke, Bernard Knowlton, William B. Davis, Paul H. Pensack, Ryan D. J Phys Chem B [Image: see text] DNA-templated molecular (dye) aggregates are a novel class of materials that have garnered attention in a broad range of areas including light harvesting, sensing, and computing. Using DNA to template dye aggregation is attractive due to the relative ease with which DNA nanostructures can be assembled in solution, the diverse array of nanostructures that can be assembled, and the ability to precisely position dyes to within a few Angstroms of one another. These factors, combined with the programmability of DNA, raise the prospect of designer materials custom tailored for specific applications. Although considerable progress has been made in characterizing the optical properties and associated electronic structures of these materials, less is known about their excited-state dynamics. For example, little is known about how the excited-state lifetime, a parameter essential to many applications, is influenced by structural factors, such as the number of dyes within the aggregate and their spatial arrangement. In this work, we use a combination of transient absorption spectroscopy and global target analysis to measure excited-state lifetimes in a series of DNA-templated cyanine dye aggregates. Specifically, we investigate six distinct dimer, trimer, and tetramer aggregates—based on the ubiquitous cyanine dye Cy5—templated using both duplex and Holliday junction DNA nanostructures. We find that these DNA-templated Cy5 aggregates all exhibit significantly reduced excited-state lifetimes, some by more than 2 orders of magnitude, and observe considerable variation among the lifetimes. We attribute the reduced excited-state lifetimes to enhanced nonradiative decay and proceed to discuss various structural factors, including exciton delocalization, dye separation, and DNA heterogeneity, that may contribute to the observed reduction and variability of excited-state lifetimes. Guided by insights from structural modeling, we find that the reduced lifetimes and enhanced nonradiative decay are most strongly correlated with the distance between the dyes. These results inform potential tradeoffs between dye separation, excitonic coupling strength, and excited-state lifetime that motivate deeper mechanistic understanding, potentially via further dye and dye template design. American Chemical Society 2021-09-02 2021-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8450906/ /pubmed/34473494 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c04517 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Huff, Jonathan S.
Turner, Daniel B.
Mass, Olga A.
Patten, Lance K.
Wilson, Christopher K.
Roy, Simon K.
Barclay, Matthew S.
Yurke, Bernard
Knowlton, William B.
Davis, Paul H.
Pensack, Ryan D.
Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity
title Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity
title_full Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity
title_fullStr Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity
title_full_unstemmed Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity
title_short Excited-State Lifetimes of DNA-Templated Cyanine Dimer, Trimer, and Tetramer Aggregates: The Role of Exciton Delocalization, Dye Separation, and DNA Heterogeneity
title_sort excited-state lifetimes of dna-templated cyanine dimer, trimer, and tetramer aggregates: the role of exciton delocalization, dye separation, and dna heterogeneity
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8450906/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34473494
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c04517
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