Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/5784
Título
Kinky DNA in solution: Small-angle-scattering study of a nucleosome positioning sequence
Autor
Publicado en
Physical Review E. 2018, V. 98, n. 4, 042417
Editorial
American Physical Society
Fecha de publicación
2018-10
ISSN
2470-0045
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevE.98.042417
Resumo
DNA is a flexible molecule, but the degree of its flexibility is subject to debate. The commonly-accepted
persistence length of lp ≈ 500Å is inconsistent with recent studies on short-chain DNA that show much greater
flexibility but do not probe its origin. We have performed x-ray and neutron small-angle scattering on a short
DNA sequence containing a strong nucleosome positioning element and analyzed the results using a modified
Kratky-Porod model to determine possible conformations. Our results support a hypothesis from Crick and Klug
in 1975 that some DNA sequences in solution can have sharp kinks, potentially resolving the discrepancy. Our
conclusions are supported by measurements on a radiation-damaged sample, where single-strand breaks lead to
increased flexibility and by an analysis of data from another sequence, which does not have kinks, but where our
method can detect a locally enhanced flexibility due to an AT domain.
Materia
Física
Physics
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones