Literature DB >> 19673131

Mechanism of thermal renaturation and hybridization of nucleic acids: Kramers' process and universality in Watson-Crick base pairing.

Jean-Louis Sikorav1, Henri Orland, Alan Braslau.   

Abstract

Renaturation and hybridization reactions lead to the pairing of complementary single-stranded nucleic acids. We present here a theoretical investigation of the mechanism of these reactions in vitro under thermal conditions (dilute solutions of single-stranded chains, in the presence of molar concentrations of monovalent salts and at elevated temperatures). The mechanism follows a Kramers' process, whereby the complementary chains overcome a potential barrier through Brownian motion. The barrier originates from a single rate-limiting nucleation event in which the first complementary base pairs are formed. The reaction then proceeds through a fast growth of the double helix. For the DNA of bacteriophages T7, T4, and phiX174, as well as for Escherichia coli DNA, the bimolecular rate k2 of the reaction increases as a power law of the average degree of polymerization <N> of the reacting single-strands: k2 is proportional to <N> alpha. This relationship holds for 100 < or = <N> < or = 50,000 with an experimentally determined exponent alpha = 0.51 +/- 0.01. The length dependence results from a thermodynamic excluded-volume effect. The reacting single-stranded chains are predicted to be in universal good solvent conditions, and the scaling law is determined by the relevant equilibrium monomer contact probability. The value theoretically predicted for the exponent is alpha = 1 - nutheta2, where nu is Flory's swelling exponent (nu approximately equal 0.588), and theta2 is a critical exponent introduced by des Cloizeaux (theta2 approximately equal 0.82), yielding alpha = 0.52 +/- 0.01, in agreement with the experimental results.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19673131     DOI: 10.1021/jp807096z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  6 in total

1.  Oxidized Derivatives of 5-Methylcytosine Alter the Stability and Dehybridization Dynamics of Duplex DNA.

Authors:  Paul J Sanstead; Brennan Ashwood; Qing Dai; Chuan He; Andrei Tokmakoff
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2020-02-05       Impact factor: 2.991

2.  An Introduction to Fluorescence in situ Hybridization in Microorganisms.

Authors:  Carina Almeida; Nuno F Azevedo
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2021

3.  Effect of molecular crowding and ionic strength on the isothermal hybridization of oligonucleotides.

Authors:  Marie Z Markarian; Joseph B Schlenoff
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2010-08-19       Impact factor: 2.991

4.  Nearest-neighbour transition-state analysis for nucleic acid kinetics.

Authors:  Nick A Rejali; Felix D Ye; Aisha M Zuiter; Caroline C Keller; Carl T Wittwer
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2021-05-07       Impact factor: 16.971

5.  Theory on the Mechanism of DNA Renaturation: Stochastic Nucleation and Zipping.

Authors:  Gnanapragasam Niranjani; Rajamanickam Murugan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-04-13       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Electrostatic melting in a single-molecule field-effect transistor with applications in genomic identification.

Authors:  Sefi Vernick; Scott M Trocchia; Steven B Warren; Erik F Young; Delphine Bouilly; Ruben L Gonzalez; Colin Nuckolls; Kenneth L Shepard
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-05-18       Impact factor: 14.919

  6 in total

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