Publication | Open Access
Remeasuring the Double Helix
220
Citations
30
References
2008
Year
Dna NanotechnologyDouble HelixSingle Molecule BiophysicsProtein FoldingNatural SciencesMedicineMacromolecular MachineDna AnalysisDna ReplicationMolecular BiologyStructural BiologyStiff Elastic RodMolecular BiophysicsDna Double HelixSoft MatterDna StretchingDna ComputingBiophysics
DNA is thought to behave as a stiff elastic rod with respect to the ubiquitous mechanical deformations inherent to its biology. To test this model at short DNA lengths, we measured the mean and variance of end-to-end length for a series of DNA double helices in solution, using small-angle x-ray scattering interference between gold nanocrystal labels. In the absence of applied tension, DNA is at least one order of magnitude softer than measured by single-molecule stretching experiments. Further, the data rule out the conventional elastic rod model. The variance in end-to-end length follows a quadratic dependence on the number of base pairs rather than the expected linear dependence, indicating that DNA stretching is cooperative over more than two turns of the DNA double helix. Our observations support the idea of long-range allosteric communication through DNA structure.
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