Publication | Open Access
Nanomechanical measurements of the sequence-dependent folding landscapes of single nucleic acid hairpins
470
Citations
52
References
2006
Year
Unfolding EnergiesMolecular BiologyFolding TransitionDna NanotechnologySingle Molecule BiophysicsNucleic Acid ChemistryProtein FoldingNanomechanical MeasurementsDna ComputingBiophysicsNucleic Acid HairpinsDna ReplicationSequence-dependent Folding LandscapesStructural BiologyNatural SciencesExperimental BiophysicsMolecular BiophysicsMedicineComputational Biophysics
Nucleic acid hairpins provide a powerful model system for probing the formation of secondary structure. We report a systematic study of the kinetics and thermodynamics of the folding transition for individual DNA hairpins of varying stem length, loop length, and stem GC content. Folding was induced mechanically in a high-resolution optical trap using a unique force clamp arrangement with fast response times. We measured 20 different hairpin sequences with quasi-random stem sequences that were 6-30 bp long, polythymidine loops that were 3-30 nt long, and stem GC content that ranged from 0% to 100%. For all hairpins studied, folding and unfolding were characterized by a single transition. From the force dependence of these rates, we determined the position and height of the energy barrier, finding that the transition state for duplex formation involves the formation of 1-2 bp next to the loop. By measuring unfolding energies spanning one order of magnitude, transition rates covering six orders of magnitude, and hairpin opening distances with subnanometer precision, our results define the essential features of the energy landscape for folding. We find quantitative agreement over the entire range of measurements with a hybrid landscape model that combines thermodynamic nearest-neighbor free energies and nanomechanical DNA stretching energies.
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