DNA-coated Functional Oil Droplets
Alessio Caciagli, Mykolas Zupkauskas, Aviad Levin, Tuomas P. J., Knowles, Cl\'ement Mugemana, Nico Bruns, Thomas O'Neill, William J. Frith and, Erika Eiser

TL;DR
This paper introduces a scalable method for creating DNA-coated oil-in-water emulsions with high coating density, enabling advanced soft matter and biotechnological applications.
Contribution
A general, scalable protocol using functional amphiphilic block copolymers for dense DNA coating of oil droplets across various production methods and oil types.
Findings
Successful creation of thermoreversible emulsion gels
Formation of hierarchical 'raspberry' droplets
Controlled droplet release demonstrated
Abstract
Many industrial soft materials often include oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions at the core of their formulations. By using tuneable interface stabilizing agents, such emulsions can self-assemble into complex structures. DNA has been used for decades as a thermoresponsive highly specific binding agent between hard and, recently, soft colloids. Up until now, emulsion droplets functionalized with DNA had relatively low coating densities and were expensive to scale up. Here a general O/W DNA-coating method using functional non-ionic amphiphilic block copolymers, both diblock and triblock, is presented. The hydrophilic polyethylene glycol ends of the surfactants are functionalized with azides, allowing for efficient, dense and controlled coupling of dibenzocyclooctane functionalized DNA to the polymers through a strain-promoted alkyne-azide click reaction. The protocol is readily scalable due to…
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