(a)
Upstream pH-dependent DNA circuit. (b) Triplex formation in
the pH-dependent substrate complex, studied by incorporating a pH-insensitive
FRET pair at the ends of the clamp-like triplex-forming strand (left)
and measuring the fluorescence signal at different pHs (right). Stable
triplex formation is observed only at pHs below 7.0. (c) The pH-dependent
triplex complex in the substrate inhibits strand displacement reaction
upon C addition (pH 5.0, left). At basic pHs the destabilization of
Hoogsteen interactions leads to substrate activation, which allows
strand displacement reaction in the presence of catalyst strand (C)
(pH 8.0, right). (d) The pH dependence of the catalyst/substrate reaction
can be finely controlled at different pHs. Here, strand displacement
reaction is followed by fluorescence measurements in a solution containing
the pH-dependent substrate (10 nM), the fuel strand (F) (20 nM), and
an external, optically labeled reporter (30 nM) (see experimental
details in the SI) that stoichiometrically
reacts with the released D to give a fluorescence signal. The catalyst
was added at a high concentration (30 nM) to better highlight the
pH dependence of the circuit. All experiments were performed in a
TAE 1x buffer + 15 mM MgCl2 at 25 °C with the pH adjusted
using small aliquots of HCl (1 M) and NaOH (1 M). Error bars here
and in the following figures represent the average and standard deviations
(average RSD = 6%) of three independent measurements.