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Biophys J, August 2002, p. 1119-1129, Vol. 83, No. 2
Leiden Institute of Chemistry, Leiden University, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
The critical concentrations pertaining to the liquid
crystal formation of pUC18 plasmid in saline solutions were obtained from 31P nuclear magnetic resonance, polarized light
microscopy, and phase equilibrium experiments. The transition is
strongly first order with a broad gap between the isotropic and
anisotropic phase. The critical boundaries are strongly and reversibly
dependent on temperature and weakly dependent on ionic strength. With
polarized light microscopy on magnetically oriented samples, the liquid crystalline phase is assigned cholesteric with a pitch on the order of
4 µm. Preliminary results show that at higher concentrations a true
crystal is formed. The isotropic-cholesteric transition is interpreted
with lyotropic liquid crystal theory including the effects of charge,
orientation entropy, and excluded volume effects. It was found that the
molecular free energy associated with the topology of the superhelix is
of paramount importance in controlling the width of the phase gap. The
theoretical results compare favorably with the critical boundary
pertaining to the disappearance of the isotropic phase, but they fail
to predict the low concentration at which the anisotropic phase first appears.
Biophys J, August 2002, p. 1119-1129, Vol. 83, No. 2
© 2002 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/02/08/1119/11 $2.00
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