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Biophys J, May 1999, p. 2488-2501, Vol. 76, No. 5
*Department of Chemistry, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia 30303, and #Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Rudman Hall, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire 03824-3544 USA
Ion relaxation plays an important role in a wide range of
phenomena involving the transport of charged biomolecules. Ion
relaxation is responsible for reducing sedimentation and diffusion
constants, reducing electrophoretic mobilities, increasing intrinsic
viscosities, and, for biomolecules that lack a permanent electric
dipole moment, provides a mechanism for orienting them in an external
electric field. Recently, a numerical boundary element method was
developed to solve the coupled Navier-Stokes, Poisson, and ion
transport equations for a polyion modeled as a rigid body of arbitrary
size, shape, and charge distribution. This method has subsequently been used to compute the electrophoretic mobilities and intrinsic
viscosities of a number of model proteins and DNA fragments. The
primary purpose of the present work is to examine the effect of ion
relaxation on the ion density and fluid velocity fields around short
DNA fragments (20 and 40 bp). Contour density as well as vector field diagrams of the various scalar and vector fields are presented and
discussed at monovalent salt concentrations of 0.03 and 0.11 M. In
addition, the net charge current fluxes in the vicinity of the DNA
fragments at low and high salt concentrations are briefly examined and discussed.
Biophys J, May 1999, p. 2488-2501, Vol. 76, No. 5
© 1999 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/99/05/2488/14 $2.00
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