Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session X54: Polymers and Biopolymers in Very Strongly Confined Environments II: Polymers in Nanochannels and Nanopores
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 8, 2019
BCEC
Room: 254A
Sponsoring
Units:
DPOLY DBIO GSNP
Chair: Ining Jou, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Abstract: X54.00002 : Controlling DNA Tug-of-War in a Dual Nanopore Device*
8:12 AM–8:24 AM
Presenter:
Walter Reisner
(Dept. of Physics, McGill University)
Authors:
Frank Liu
(Two Pore Guys)
Yuning Zhang
(Dept. of Physics, McGill University)
Roland Nagel
(Two Pore Guys)
Walter Reisner
(Dept. of Physics, McGill University)
William B Dunbar
(Two Pore Guys)
Methods for reducing and directly controlling the speed of DNA through a nanopore are needed to enhance sensing performance for direct strand sequencing and mapping of sequence-specific features. We have created a method for reducing and controlling the speed of DNA that uses two independently controllable nanopores operated with an active control logic. The pores are positioned sufficiently close to permit co-capture of a single DNA by both pores. Control logic then turns on constant competing voltages at the pores leading to a ''tug-of-war'' whereby the molecule is pulled from both ends by opposing forces. These forces exert both conformational and speed control over the co-captured molecule, removing folds and reducing the translocation rate. When the voltages are tuned so that the electrophoretic force applied to both ends of the molecule comes into balance, the life-time of the tug-of-war state is limited purely by diffusive sliding of the DNA between the pores (yielding a two order of magnitude enhancement in translocation time). We quantify the translocation slow-down as a function of voltage tuning and show that the slow-down is well described by a first passage analysis for a one-dimensional sub-diffusive process.
*This work was supported by Two Pore Guy's Inc (2PG).
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