TY - JOUR
T1 - On the degree of unwinding of the DNA helix by ethidium. II. Studies by electron microscopy
AU - Liu, Leroy F.
AU - Wang, James C.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work has been supported by a grant from U.S. Public Health Service (GM 14621), a professorship from the Miller Institute for Research in Basic Sciences (to J.C.W.), and a fellowship from the Li Foundation (to L.F.L.).
PY - 1975/7/23
Y1 - 1975/7/23
N2 - When a negatively twisted covalently closed DNA is annealed with single-stranded fragments of the same DNA, under proper conditions a loop (or loops) may form by the disruption of a segment (or segments) of base pairs between the complementary strands of the covalently closed DNA, and the formation of base pairs between the strands of the covalently closed DNA and the single-stranded fragments. Since such a process involves essentially no net gain or loss of the number of base pairs, it is driven by the free energy favoring the reduction of the number of superhelical turns. If the fragments are sufficiently long or are present at a sufficiently high concentration during annealing, the most stable product between a covalently closed DNA and the DNA fragments (under conditions favoring the formation of double-stranded DNA) is a looped molecule devoid of superhelical turns. The size of the looped region or regions, which can be measured by electron microscopy, provides a way to determine the degree of superhelicity of the covalently closed DNA in the absence of the fragments. When this is compared with the degree of superhelicity of the covalently closed DNA determined by titration with the intercalative dye ethidium, the unwinding angle of the DNA double helix due to the intercalation of an ethidium can be calculated. Such measurements were done on two samples of phage PM2 DNA with different extents of supercoiling. The results are in agreement with the value 26° obtained recently by alkaline titration of covalently closed PM2 DNA samples in CsCl density gradients (Wang, J.C., (1974) J. Mol. Biol. 89, 783-801).
AB - When a negatively twisted covalently closed DNA is annealed with single-stranded fragments of the same DNA, under proper conditions a loop (or loops) may form by the disruption of a segment (or segments) of base pairs between the complementary strands of the covalently closed DNA, and the formation of base pairs between the strands of the covalently closed DNA and the single-stranded fragments. Since such a process involves essentially no net gain or loss of the number of base pairs, it is driven by the free energy favoring the reduction of the number of superhelical turns. If the fragments are sufficiently long or are present at a sufficiently high concentration during annealing, the most stable product between a covalently closed DNA and the DNA fragments (under conditions favoring the formation of double-stranded DNA) is a looped molecule devoid of superhelical turns. The size of the looped region or regions, which can be measured by electron microscopy, provides a way to determine the degree of superhelicity of the covalently closed DNA in the absence of the fragments. When this is compared with the degree of superhelicity of the covalently closed DNA determined by titration with the intercalative dye ethidium, the unwinding angle of the DNA double helix due to the intercalation of an ethidium can be calculated. Such measurements were done on two samples of phage PM2 DNA with different extents of supercoiling. The results are in agreement with the value 26° obtained recently by alkaline titration of covalently closed PM2 DNA samples in CsCl density gradients (Wang, J.C., (1974) J. Mol. Biol. 89, 783-801).
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U2 - 10.1016/0005-2787(75)90064-7
DO - 10.1016/0005-2787(75)90064-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 1148245
AN - SCOPUS:0016860269
SN - 0005-2787
VL - 395
SP - 405
EP - 412
JO - BBA Section Nucleic Acids And Protein Synthesis
JF - BBA Section Nucleic Acids And Protein Synthesis
IS - 4
ER -