Publications (2) View all
-
Article: Effect of crowding on the conformation of interwound DNA strands from neutron scattering measurements and Monte Carlo simulations.
Xiaoying Zhu, Siow Yee Ng, Amar Nath Gupta, Yuan Ping Feng, Bow Ho, Alain Lapp, Stefan U Egelhaaf, V Trevor Forsyth, Michael Haertlein, Martine Moulin, Ralf Schweins, Johan R C van der Maarel[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: With a view to determining the distance between the two opposing duplexes in supercoiled DNA, we have measured small angle neutron scattering from pHSG298 plasmid (2675 base pairs) dispersed in saline solutions. Experiments were carried out under full and zero average DNA neutron scattering contrast using hydrogenated plasmid and a 1:1 mixture of hydrogenated and perdeuterated plasmid, respectively. In the condition of zero average contrast, the scattering intensity is directly proportional to the single DNA molecule scattering function (form factor), irrespective of the DNA concentration and without complications from intermolecular interference. The form factors are interpreted with Monte Carlo computer simulation. For this purpose, the many body problem of a dense DNA solution was reduced to the one of a single DNA molecule in a congested state by confinement in a cylindrical potential. It was observed that the interduplex distance decreases with increasing concentration of salt as well as plasmid. Therefore, besides ionic strength, DNA crowding is shown to be important in controlling the interwound structure and site juxtaposition of distal segments of supercoiled DNA. This first study exploiting zero average DNA contrast has been made possible by the availability of perdeuterated plasmid.Physical Review E 06/2010; 81(6 Pt 1):061905. · 2.26 Impact Factor -
Article: Viscoelasticity of entangled lambda-phage DNA solutions.
Xiaoying Zhu, Binu Kundukad, Johan R C van der Maarel[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The viscoelastic moduli of lambda-phage DNA through the entanglement transition were obtained with particle tracking microrheology. With increasing frequency, the viscous loss modulus first increases, then levels off, and eventually increases again. Concurrently, the elastic storage modulus monotonously increases and eventually levels off to a constant high frequency plateau value. Once the DNA molecules become entangled at about ten times the overlap concentration, the elastic storage modulus becomes larger than the viscous loss modulus in an intermediate frequency range. The number of entanglements per chain is obtained from the plateau value of the elasticity modulus. The longest, global relaxation time pertaining to the motion of the DNA molecules is obtained from the low shear viscosity as well as from the lowest crossover frequency of the viscous loss and elastic storage moduli. The concentration dependencies of the low shear viscosity, the number of entanglements per chain, and the relaxation time agree with the relevant scaling laws for reptation dynamics of entangled polyelectrolytes in an excess of simple, low molecular weight salt with screened electrostatic interactions.The Journal of chemical physics 12/2008; 129(18):185103. · 3.09 Impact Factor