Monte Carlo Simulation of the Assembly of bis-Biotinylated DNA and Streptavidin
β Scribed by Jan Richter; Michael Adler; Christof M. Niemeyer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 153 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1439-4235
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We present Monte Carlo simulations of the self-assembly of bivalent bis-biotinylated DNA molecules with the tetravalent biotin-binding protein streptavidin (STV). By fitting the STV binding probabilities for the four possible valencies, the modelling correctly reproduces the dependencies of various network parameters experimentally observed in an earlier study. The combined results from the experimental and theoretical studies suggest that the binding probability for divalent STV formation is about 50 times larger than for the formation of trivalent and about 200 times larger than for tetravalent STV. In accordance with the experimental results, the modelling also indicates that the mixture of an equimolar ratio of DNA and STV leads to a maximum in size of the oligomeric DNA-STV clusters formed. Furthermore, we found a percolation transition in which the DNA cluster size increases rapidly with increasing DNA concentration resulting in the formation of a single supercluster at elevated concentrations. This behaviour coincides with the occurrence of an immobile band previously observed in electrophoretic experiments, indicating the formation of extremely large DNA-STV aggregate networks.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Monte Carlo simulations have been carried out on DNA oligomers using an internal coordinate model associated with a pseudorotational representation of sugar repuckering. It is shown that when this model is combined with the scaled collective variable approach of Noguti and Go, much more efficient si
Carlo techniques for simulating the evolution of an assembly of charged particles interacting with a background gas medium under the influence of an electrical field are presented. This simulation problem has inherent parallelism in nature. All the particles can be traced independently in a short ti
## Values of the rue a~ which an alkrnaring copolymcric nucleic acid mclw ar~er a hzmpcn~urejump have been oblaincd wilh a Monle Carlo simulation. Using a Glauber-king scheme 10 model the dynamics. the helix-random coil transilion shows a pure "monodispersive" rslaxalion in accord with previous an