Origin of the intrinsic rigidity of DNA

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Abstract

The intrinsic rigidities of DNA and RNA helices are generally thought to arise from some combination of vertical base-stacking interactions and intra-helix phosphate-phosphate charge repulsion; however, the relative contributions of these two types of interaction to helix rigidity have not been quantified. To address this issue, we have measured the rotational decay times of a 'gapped-duplex' DNA molecule possessing a central, single-stranded region, dT24, before and after addition of the free purine base, N6-methyladenine (meA). Upon addition of meA, the bases pair with the T residues, forming a continuous stack within the gap region. Formation of the gapped duplex is accompanied by a nearly 2-fold increase in decay time, to values that are indistinguishable from the full duplex control for monovalent salt concentrations up to 90 mM. These results indicate that at least 90% of the rigidity of the dTn-dAn homopolymer derives from base pair stacking effects, with phosphate-phosphate interactions contributing relatively little to net helix rigidity at moderate salt concentrations. © Oxford University Press 2004; all rights reserved.

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Mills, J. B., & Hagerman, P. J. (2004). Origin of the intrinsic rigidity of DNA. Nucleic Acids Research, 32(13), 4055–4059. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkh740

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