HOMECONTACTSITE MAPIMPRINT
CeNS Center for NanoScience LMU Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
CeNS HomepageLMU Homepage
Home  >  News  >  News

Friday, 24 April, 2020

Dynamics of the Buckling Transition in Double-Stranded DNA and RNA

Katharina Ott, Linda Martini, Jan Lipfert, Ulrich Gerland: -
doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2020.01.049

DNA under torsional strain undergoes a buckling transition that is the fundamental step in plectoneme nucleation and supercoil dynamics, which are critical for the processing of genomic information. Despite its importance, quantitative models of the buckling transition, in particular to also explain the surprising two-orders-of-magnitude difference between the buckling times for RNA and DNA revealed by single-molecule tweezers experiments, are currently lacking. Additionally, little is known about the configurations of the DNA during the buckling transition because they are not directly observable experimentally. Here, we use a discrete worm-like chain model and Brownian dynamics to simulate the DNA/RNA buckling transition. Our simulations are in good agreement with experimentally determined parameters of the buckling transition. The simulations show that the buckling time strongly and exponentially depends on the bending stiffness, which accounts for more than half the measured difference between DNA and RNA. Analyzing the microscopic conformations of the chain revealed by our simulations, we find clear evidence for a solenoid-shaped transition state and a curl intermediate. The curl intermediate features a single loop and becomes increasingly populated at low forces. Taken together, the simulations suggest that the worm-like chain model can account semiquantitatively for the buckling dynamics of both DNA and RNA.

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006349520301697