The amount and type of self-entanglement of DNA filaments is significantly affected by spatial confinement, which is ubiquitous in biological systems. Motivated by recent advancements in single DNA molecule experiments based on nanofluidic devices and by the introduction of algorithms capable of detecting knots in open chains, we investigate numerically the entanglement of linear, open DNA chains confined inside nano-slits. The results regard the abundance, type, and length of occurring knots and are compared with recent findings for DNA inside nano-channels. In both cases, the width of the confining region, D, spans the 30 nm-1 mu m range and the confined DNA chains are 1-4 mu m long. It is found that the knotting probability is maximum for slit widths in the 70-100 nm range. However, over the considered DNA contour lengths, the maximum incidence of knots remains below 20%, while for channel confinement it tops 50%. Further differences of the entanglement are seen for the average contour length of the knotted region, which drops significantly below D similar to 100 nm for channel-confinement, while it stays approximately constant for slit-like confinement. These properties ought to reverberate in different kinetic properties of linear DNA depending on confinement and could be detectable experimentally or exploitable in nano-technological applications.

Knotting of linear DNA in nano-slits and nano-channels: a numerical study / Orlandini, E; Micheletti, Cristian. - In: JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL PHYSICS. - ISSN 0092-0606. - 39:2(2013), pp. 267-275. [10.1007/s10867-013-9305-0]

Knotting of linear DNA in nano-slits and nano-channels: a numerical study

Micheletti, Cristian
2013-01-01

Abstract

The amount and type of self-entanglement of DNA filaments is significantly affected by spatial confinement, which is ubiquitous in biological systems. Motivated by recent advancements in single DNA molecule experiments based on nanofluidic devices and by the introduction of algorithms capable of detecting knots in open chains, we investigate numerically the entanglement of linear, open DNA chains confined inside nano-slits. The results regard the abundance, type, and length of occurring knots and are compared with recent findings for DNA inside nano-channels. In both cases, the width of the confining region, D, spans the 30 nm-1 mu m range and the confined DNA chains are 1-4 mu m long. It is found that the knotting probability is maximum for slit widths in the 70-100 nm range. However, over the considered DNA contour lengths, the maximum incidence of knots remains below 20%, while for channel confinement it tops 50%. Further differences of the entanglement are seen for the average contour length of the knotted region, which drops significantly below D similar to 100 nm for channel-confinement, while it stays approximately constant for slit-like confinement. These properties ought to reverberate in different kinetic properties of linear DNA depending on confinement and could be detectable experimentally or exploitable in nano-technological applications.
2013
39
2
267
275
10.1007/s10867-013-9305-0
https://arxiv.org/abs/1302.3624
Orlandini, E; Micheletti, Cristian
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
JBiolPhys_2013_DNA_slits_channels.pdf

non disponibili

Tipologia: Versione Editoriale (PDF)
Licenza: Non specificato
Dimensione 735.26 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
735.26 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/14042
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 28
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 27
social impact