In the presence of multivalent cations, high molecular weight DNA undergoes a dramatic condensation to a compact, usually highly ordered toroidal structure. This review begins with an overview of DNA condensation : condensing agents, morphology, kinetics, and reversibility, and the minimum size requ
Condensation of DNA by multivalent cations: Considerations on mechanism
β Scribed by Victor A. Bloomfield
- Book ID
- 102766117
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 937 KB
- Volume
- 31
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3525
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β¦ Synopsis
DNA is generally found within viruses and cells in a tightly packaged state, typically occupying only 10-4-10-6 of the volume of the uncondensed DNA wormlike coil. Condensation can be induced in vitro at low salt by the naturally occurring polyamines spermidine3+ and spermine4+, by hexammine cobalt (111) , and even by Mg2+ in methanol-water mixtures.
These condensates generally have an orderly, toroidal, or rodlike shape and size similar to that of DNA gently lysed from phage heads. It is also striking that the condensate size distribution is independent of DNA molecular length from 400 to 40,000 base pairs (bp) , but that shorter DNA molecules (e.g., 150-bp mononucleosomal DNA) cannot condense in this fashion. We have constructed a successive association equilibrium theory to attempt to explain these results, using an equation devised by Tanford for micelle formation. Most of the obvious attractive and repulsive free energy contributions (mixing, bending, hydration, and other nearest-neighbor interactions) are linear in the amount of DNA incorporated, but the net attractive AGO grows nonlinearly because of the increasing average number of nearest neighbors of each duplex as the particle grows. In order that the size distribution have a maximum, a quadratic repulsive free energy is also required, arising from the electrostatic self-energy of the incompletely neutralized particles. The net attractive free energy per base pair interaction is tiny, on the order of kT. Despite the apparent generally correct order of magnitude of the various free energy terms, the calculated size distribution is smaller and narrower than observed experimentally. It appears that the size distribution of condensed particles is determined kinetically rather than thermodynamically. Very short DNA molecules cannot nucleate stable aggregates because they cannot develop adequate overlap, either internally or intermolecularly. A substantial fraction of rodlike condensates is obsented in aqueous solutions only with a rather inefficient condensing agent, permethylated spermidine. This suggests that slow condensation kinetics may be required to overcome the high activation energy of highly distorted DNA bends or kinks at the turning points of rods. Evidence is reviewed that condensation may be associated with localized helix structure distortion provoked by condensing agents.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
DNA in viruses and cells exists in highly condensed, tightly packaged states. We have undertaken an in vitro study of the kinetics of DNA condensation by the trivalent cation hexaammine cobalt (III) with the aim of formulating a quantitative, mechanistic model of the condensation process. Experiment
## Abstract Controlling the size of condensed DNA particles is a key determinant for their diffusion __in vivo__ as well as for gene delivery to target cells. Towards this goal, DNA molecules were compacted individually by cationic thiolβdetergents into discrete nanometric entities. These particles
## Abstract This study found that divalent cations induced the further condensation of partially condensed DNA within nonstochiometric polycation complexes. The addition of a few mmol of a divalent cation such as calcium reduced by half the inflection point at which DNA became fully condensed by po