DNA nanopore translocation in glutamate solutions

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Abstract

Nanopore experiments have traditionally been carried out with chloride-based solutions. Here we introduce silver/silver-glutamate-based electrochemistry as an alternative, and study the viscosity, conductivity, and nanopore translocation characteristics of potassium-, sodium-, and lithium-glutamate solutions. We show that it has a linear response at typical voltages and can be used to detect DNA translocations through a nanopore. The glutamate anion also acts as a redox-capable thickening agent, with high-viscosity solutions capable of slowing down the DNA translocation process by up to 11 times, with a corresponding 7 time reduction in signal. These results demonstrate that glutamate can replace chloride as the primary anion in nanopore resistive pulse sensing.

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Plesa, C., Van Loo, N., & Dekker, C. (2015). DNA nanopore translocation in glutamate solutions. Nanoscale, 7(32), 13605–13609. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5nr02793d

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