Guanine binding to gold nanoparticles through nonbonding interactions

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Abstract

Gold nanoparticles have been widely used as nanocarriers in gene delivery. However, the binding mechanism between gold nanoparticles and DNA bases remains a puzzle. We performed density functional theory calculations with and without dispersion correction on AuN (N = 13, 55, or 147) nanoparticles in high-symmetry cuboctahedral structures to understand the mechanism of their binding with guanine at the under-coordinated sites. Our study verified that: (i) negative charges transfer from the inner area to the surface of a nanoparticle as a result of the surface quantum trapping effect; and (ii) the valence states shift up toward the Fermi level, and thereby participate more actively in the binding to guanine. These effects are more prominent in a smaller nanoparticle, which has a larger surface-to-volume ratio. Additional fragment orbital analysis revealed that: (i) electron donation from the lone-pair orbital of N to the unoccupied orbital of the Au cluster occurs in all complexes; (ii) π back-donation occurs from the polarized Au dyz orbital to the N py-π* orbital when there is no Au⋯H-N hydrogen bond, and, (iii) depending on the configuration, Au⋯H-N hydrogen bonding can also exist, to which the Au occupied orbital and the H-N unoccupied orbital contribute. © 2013 the Owner Societies.

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Zhang, X., Sun, C. Q., & Hirao, H. (2013). Guanine binding to gold nanoparticles through nonbonding interactions. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 15(44), 19284–19292. https://doi.org/10.1039/c3cp52149d

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