nanoquebec 2006-11-14 08:37
Researcher shows that DNA gets kinky easily at the nanoscale
[b]Scientists have answered a long-standing molecular stumper regarding DNA: How can parts of such a rigid molecule bend and coil without requiring large amounts of force? According to a team of researchers from the United States and the Netherlands, led by a physicist from the University of Pennsylvania, DNA is much more flexible than previously believed when examined over extremely small lengths. They used a technique called atomic force microscopy to determine the amount of energy necessary to bend DNA over nano-size lengths.[/b]Ea4Z;q2S*k1Vk
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The findings, which appear in the November issue of the journal [i]Nature Nanotechnology, [/i]illustrate how molecular properties often appear different when viewed at different degrees of magnification.
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"DNA is not a passive molecule. It constantly needs to[i] bend,[/i] forming loops and kinks, as other molecules interact with it," said Philip Nelson, a professor in Penn's Department of Physics and Astronomy in the School of Arts and Sciences. "But when people looked at long chunks of DNA, it always seemed to behave like a stiff elastic rod."_4U(a(UlK4L
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For example, DNA must wrap itself around proteins, forming tiny molecular structures called nucleosomes, which help regulate how genes are read. The formation of tight DNA [b]loops also plays a key role in switching some genes off[/b]. According to Nelson, such processes were considered a minor mystery of nature, in part because researchers didn't have the tools of nanotechnology to examine molecules in such fine detail.
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"Common sense and physics seemed to tell us that DNA just shouldn't spontaneously bend into such tight structures, yet it does," Nelson said. "In the conventional view of a DNA molecule, wrapping DNA into a nucleosome would be like bending a yardstick around a baseball."