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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on November 2, 2007.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.107.117036
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Biophysical Journal 94:2452-2469 (2008)
© 2008 The Biophysical Society

There and (Slowly) Back Again: Entropy-Driven Hysteresis in a Model of DNA Overstretching

Stephen Whitelam, Sander Pronk and Phillip L. Geissler

Department of Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley, and Physical Biosciences and Materials Sciences Divisions, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Stephen Whitelam, Tel.: 44-24-7615-0243; E-mail: s.b.whitelam{at}warwick.ac.uk.

When pulled along its axis, double-stranded DNA elongates abruptly at a force of ~65 pN. Two physical pictures have been developed to describe this overstretched state. The first proposes that strong forces induce a phase transition to a molten state consisting of unhybridized single strands. The second picture introduces an elongated hybridized phase called S-DNA. Little thermodynamic evidence exists to discriminate directly between these competing pictures. Here we show that within a microscopic model of DNA we can distinguish between the dynamics associated with each. In experiment, considerable hysteresis in a cycle of stretching and shortening develops as temperature is increased. Since there are few possible causes of hysteresis in a system whose extent is appreciable in only one dimension, such behavior offers a discriminating test of the two pictures of overstretching. Most experiments are performed upon nicked DNA, permitting the detachment (unpeeling) of strands. We show that the long-wavelength progression of the unpeeled front generates hysteresis, the character of which agrees with experiment only if we assume the existence of S-DNA. We also show that internal melting can generate hysteresis, the degree of which depends upon the nonextensive loop entropy of single-stranded DNA.







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Copyright © 2008 by the Biophysical Society.