Monolayer Graphene Platform for the Study of DNA Damage by Low-Energy Electron Irradiation

2013 
Novel materials and devices that probe the dynamics and stability of biomolecules under nonequilibrium conditions are necessary to advance our fundamental understanding of processes such as radiation-induced carcinogenesis. Development of effective radiotherapy strategies also relies upon the ability to control low-energy electron-induced DNA breakage in vitro. Here, we report the use of a sensitive chemical-vapor-deposited graphene platform for controlled and enhanced sequence-dependent low-energy electron-induced DNA damage studies. The use of p-doped graphene on Au thin films enhances DNA breakage due to phosphate-mediated parallel adsorption geometries, direct ballistic electron transfer to dissociative sugar–phosphate shape resonances, and image-potential-induced changes in the resonance lifetimes and energy widths. Graphene adsorbed on Au thin films also provides enhanced electric fields for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). The combination of these effects allows direct, rapid assessment ...
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