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Stretching DNA origami: effect of nicks and Holliday junctions on the axial stiffness
Author(s) -
WeiHung Jung,
Enze Chen,
Rémi Veneziano,
Stavros Gaitanaros,
Yun Chen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkaa985
Subject(s) - holliday junction , stiffness , helix (gastropod) , materials science , elasticity (physics) , rod , dna , biophysics , yield (engineering) , mechanics , physics , composite material , biology , dna repair , medicine , ecology , genetics , alternative medicine , pathology , snail
The axial stiffness of DNA origami is determined as a function of key nanostructural characteristics. Different constructs of two-helix nanobeams with specified densities of nicks and Holliday junctions are synthesized and stretched by fluid flow. Implementing single particle tracking to extract force-displacement curves enables the measurement of DNA origami stiffness values at the enthalpic elasticity regime, i.e. for forces larger than 15 pN. Comparisons between ligated and nicked helices show that the latter exhibit nearly a two-fold decrease in axial stiffness. Numerical models that treat the DNA helices as elastic rods are used to evaluate the local loss of stiffness at the locations of nicks and Holliday junctions. It is shown that the models reproduce the experimental data accurately, indicating that both of these design characteristics yield a local stiffness two orders of magnitude smaller than the corresponding value of the intact double-helix. This local degradation in turn leads to a macroscopic loss of stiffness that is evaluated numerically for multi-helix DNA bundles.

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