ISSN:
0006-3525
Keywords:
Chemistry
;
Polymer and Materials Science
Source:
Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
Topics:
Chemistry and Pharmacology
Notes:
The formation of a topologically closed DNA loop is important in many biological processes, including the regulation of transcription, recombination, and replication. Modeling DNA as an isotropic elastic rod, we use finite element analysis to show that the dependence of the twist (ΔTw) and the writhe (Wr) upon the linking number deficit (ΔLk) is strongly influenced by intrinsic bends. We determine how the geometry of a DNA loop changes as a function of the number of uniformly spaced coplanar 20° bends, oriented so as to open toward the center of the loop. We also calculate the geometry of DNA rods that are smoothly bent to the same extent. The response of both ΔTw and Wr of a bent DNA to changes in ΔLk falls into one of three categories, depending upon the number of bends. For a single bend of 20°, Wr increases monotonically with ΔLk and the change in ΔTw with distance is constant along the entire DNA axis. For two to ten 20° bends, Wr passes first through a local maximum, then through a local minimum, and finally increases monotonically as ΔLk increases. For eleven to eighteen 20° bends, Wr again varies monotonically with ΔLk. For all numbers of bends greater than two, the ΔTw per unit length depends upon the distribution of intrinsic bends, being constant between any two adjoining bends but varying with their position relative to the cut location. Accompanying these ΔLk-associated changes in Wr and ΔTw per unit length are characteristic changes in geometry that are specific for each category. The results of these calculations raise the possibility that intrinsic bends can serve as a control factor in the biological functions associated with loop formation in DNA. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Additional Material:
11 Ill.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
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