Determination of nanogram quantities of osmium-labeled nucleic acids by stripping (inverse) voltammetry
✍ Scribed by E. Paleček; Mac Anh Hung
- Book ID
- 102986857
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 554 KB
- Volume
- 132
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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✦ Synopsis
Modification of nucleic acids with OSO4 in the presence of pyridine results in a formation of a covalently bound electroactive center in a polynucleotide chain detectable by polarographic (voltammetric) methods. It has been shown that DNA modified with osmium (DNA-Os) accumulates at the hanging mercury-drop electrode during a waiting time in a wide range of potentials between 0 and -1.0 V (against the saturated calomel electrode) and produce at neutral pH a well-developed reduction peak at about -1.2 V due to scanning in the cathodic direction. Using the differential-pulse stripping (inverse) voltammetry, nanogram quantities of single-stranded DNA-Os can be determined at relatively short waiting times (1-3 min). Double-stranded DNA is modified with osmium to a much lesser extent as compared to single-stranded polynucleotides. The degree of modification of double-helical DNA is influenced by the presence of single-stranded and distorted double-stranded regions in the DNA molecules and by the environmental conditions which influence the DNA conformation. Osmium can thus be used as a probe of the DNA structure, and a few micrograms of double-helical DNA sample suffice for the voltammetric analysis.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
In adsorptive transfer stripping voltammetry (AdTSV), DNA is first adsorbed at the electrode, the electrode is washed and transferred (with the adsorbed layer) in the medium not containing DNA, and voltammetric analysis is performed in this medium. Adsorption can be performed from a drop of DNA solu