The reptation dynamics of DNA chains in gel electrophoresis is discussed. The differences between the Lumpkin, Dbjardin, and Zimm (LDZ), and the Slater and Noolandi (SN), biased reptation models are pointed out and studied. We show that new assumptions are necessary in order to study large-field ele
Pulsed electrophoresis: Some implications of reptation theories
β Scribed by Jean Louis Viovy
- Book ID
- 102761249
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 580 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3525
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β¦ Synopsis
This is an attempt to provide some theoretical guidelines for understanding and developing the pulsed electrophoresis techniques proposed as powerful means for separating very large macromolecules such as chromosome-sized DNA. We show that even a simple approach using recent theories for biased reptation and ignoring the detailed shape of relaxation functions leads to nontrivial predictions. These predictions are used to discuss the presently available pulsed electrophoresis methods. We focus on several practical limits imp& on experiments by the critical values of the parameters d a t e d with different electrophoresis regimes, such as the limiting effective velocity, or the mobility gap associated with the drift resonance. Some conceptual problems that do not seem to have been considered yet are identified. In particular, we show that the early expectation that orthogonal-field pulsed electrophoresis could be an efficient way to fight chain orientation is probably unpractical. We propose a different approach, emphasizing resonance aspects.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Although electrophoresis is one of the basic methods of the modern molecular biology laboratory, new ideas are being suggested at an accelerated rate, in large part because of the pressing demands of the biomedical community. Although we now have, at least for some methods, a fairly good theoretical