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DNA Nunchucks: Nanoinstrumentation for Single-Molecule Measurement of Stiffness and Bending

10

Citations

43

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Bending of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) has important applications in biology and engineering, but measurement of DNA bend angles is notoriously difficult and rarely dynamic. Here we introduce a nanoscale instrument that makes dynamic measurement of the bend in short dsDNAs easy enough to be routine. The instrument works by embedding the ends of a dsDNA in stiff, fluorescently labeled DNA nanotubes, thereby mechanically magnifying their orientations. The DNA nanotubes are readily confined to a plane and imaged while freely diffusing. Single-molecule bend angles are rapidly and reliably extracted from the images by a neural network. We find that angular variance across a population increases with dsDNA length, as predicted by the worm-like chain model, although individual distributions can differ significantly from one another. For dsDNAs with phased A<sub>6</sub>-tracts, we measure an intrinsic bend of 17 ± 1° per A<sub>6</sub>-tract, consistent with other methods, and a length-dependent angular variance that indicates A<sub>6</sub>-tracts are (80 ± 30)% stiffer than generic dsDNA.

References

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