Cation Charge Dependence of the Forces Driving DNA Assembly

被引:43
作者
DeRouchey, Jason [1 ]
Parsegian, V. Adrian [2 ]
Rau, Donald C. [1 ]
机构
[1] NICHHD, Program Phys Biol, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[2] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Phys, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
X-RAY-DIFFRACTION; HYDRATION FORCES; RODLIKE POLYELECTROLYTES; INTERMOLECULAR FORCES; MULTIVALENT CATIONS; BIOGENIC POLYAMINES; CHROMATIN-STRUCTURE; GENE-EXPRESSION; DOUBLE HELICES; ATTRACTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.bpj.2010.08.028
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
Understanding the strength and specificity of interactions among biologically important macromolecules that control cellular functions requires quantitative knowledge of intermolecular forces. Controlled DNA condensation and assembly are particularly critical for biology, with separate repulsive and attractive intermolecular forces determining the extent of DNA compaction. How these forces depend on the charge of the condensing ion has not been determined, but such knowledge is fundamental for understanding the basis of DNA-DNA interactions. Here, we measure DNA force-distance curves for a homologous set of arginine peptides. All forces are well fit as the sum of two exponentials with 2.4- and 4.8-angstrom decay lengths. The shorter-decay-length force is always repulsive, with an amplitude that varies slightly with length or charge. The longer-decay-length force varies strongly with cation charge, changing from repulsion with Arg(1) to attraction with Arg(2). Force curves for a series of homologous polyamines and the heterogeneous protein protamine are quite similar, demonstrating the universality of these forces for DNA assembly. Repulsive amplitudes of the shorter-decay-length force are species-dependent but nearly independent of charge within each species. A striking observation was that the attractive force amplitudes for all samples collapse to a single curve, varying linearly with the inverse of the cation charge.
引用
收藏
页码:2608 / 2615
页数:8
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]  
Bloomfield VA, 1997, BIOPOLYMERS, V44, P269, DOI 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0282(1997)44:3<269::AID-BIP6>3.0.CO
[2]  
2-T
[3]   DNA condensation [J].
Bloomfield, VA .
CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 1996, 6 (03) :334-341
[4]   Measurement of forces between hydroxypropylcellulose polymers: Temperature favored assembly and salt exclusion [J].
Bonnet-Gonnet, C ;
Leikin, S ;
Chi, S ;
Rau, DC ;
Parsegian, VA .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2001, 105 (09) :1877-1886
[5]   Packaging paternal chromosomes with protamine [J].
Braun, RE .
NATURE GENETICS, 2001, 28 (01) :10-12
[6]   Encapsidated conformation of bacteriophage T7 DNA [J].
Cerritelli, ME ;
Cheng, NQ ;
Rosenberg, AH ;
McPherson, CE ;
Booy, FP ;
Steven, AC .
CELL, 1997, 91 (02) :271-280
[7]   Hydration forces underlie the exclusion of salts and of neutral polar solutes from hydroxypropylcellulose [J].
Chik, J ;
Mizrahi, S ;
Chi, SL ;
Parsegian, VA ;
Rau, DC .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2005, 109 (18) :9111-9118
[8]   Three-dimensional architecture of the bacteriophage φ29 packaged genome and elucidation of its packaging process [J].
Comolli, Luis R. ;
Spakowitz, Andrew J. ;
Siegerist, Cnistina E. ;
Jardine, Paul J. ;
Grimes, Shelley ;
Anderson, Dwight L. ;
Bustamante, Carlos ;
Downing, Kenneth H. .
VIROLOGY, 2008, 371 (02) :267-277
[9]   Controlling the size of nanoscale toroidal DNA condensates with static curvature and ionic strength [J].
Conwell, CC ;
Vilfan, ID ;
Hud, NV .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2003, 100 (16) :9296-9301
[10]   Structural investigations of DNA-polycation complexes [J].
DeRouchey, J ;
Netz, RR ;
Rädler, JO .
EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL E, 2005, 16 (01) :17-28