Thermodynamic behavior of short oligonucleotides in microarray hybridizations can be described using Gibbs free energy in a nearest-neighbor model
S. Weckx, E. Carlon, L. De Vuyst, P. Van Hummelen

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the hybridization intensity of short oligonucleotides on microarrays correlates strongly with Gibbs free energy, enabling better prediction and control of hybridization specificity using a nearest-neighbor thermodynamic model.
Contribution
It provides quantitative evidence that Gibbs free energy from the nearest-neighbor model accurately predicts microarray hybridization behavior, including mismatches.
Findings
Hybridization intensity correlates with Gibbs free energy over three orders of magnitude.
The Langmuir model describes the hybridization process well.
Thermodynamic calculations in solution apply to surface-bound microarray hybridizations.
Abstract
While designing oligonucleotide-based microarrays, cross-hybridization between surface-bound oligos and non-intended labeled targets is probably the most difficult parameter to predict. Although literature describes rules-of-thumb concerning oligo length, overall similarity, and continuous stretches, the final behavior is difficult to predict. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of well-defined mismatches on hybridization specificity using CodeLink Activated Slides, and to study quantitatively the relation between hybridization intensity and Gibbs free energy (Delta G), taking the mismatches into account. Our data clearly showed a correlation between the hybridization intensity and Delta G of the oligos over three orders of magnitude for the hybridization intensity, which could be described by the Langmuir model. As Delta G was calculated according to the…
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