Diffusion of isolated DNA molecules: Dependence on length and topology

Diffusion Electrophoresis, Agar Gel Nucleic Acid Conformation DNA 01 natural sciences 0104 chemical sciences
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0601903103 Publication Date: 2006-04-29T00:39:51Z
ABSTRACT
The conformation and dynamics of circular polymers is a subject of considerable theoretical and experimental interest. DNA is an important example because it occurs naturally in different topological states, including linear, relaxed circular, and supercoiled circular forms. A fundamental question is how the diffusion coefficients of isolated polymers scale with molecular length and how they vary for different topologies. Here, diffusion coefficients D for relaxed circular, supercoiled, and linear DNA molecules of length L ranging from ≈6 to 290 kbp were measured by tracking the Brownian motion of single molecules. A topology-independent scaling law D ∼ L −ν was observed with ν L = 0.571 ± 0.014, ν C = 0.589 ± 0.018, and ν S = 0.571 ± 0.057 for linear, relaxed circular, and supercoiled DNA, respectively, in good agreement with the scaling exponent of ν ≅ 0.588 predicted by renormalization group theory for polymers with significant excluded volume interactions. Our findings thus provide evidence in support of several theories that predict an effective diameter of DNA much greater than the Debye screening length. In addition, the measured ratio D Circular / D Linear = 1.32 ± 0.014 was closer to the value of 1.45 predicted by using renormalization group theory than the value of 1.18 predicted by classical Kirkwood hydrodynamic theory and agreed well with a value of 1.31 predicted when incorporating a recently proposed expression for the radius of gyration of circular polymers into the Zimm model.
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