Authors
Hernan G Garcia, Paul Grayson, Lin Han, Mandar Inamdar, Jané Kondev, Philip C Nelson, Rob Phillips, Jonathan Widom, Paul A Wiggins
Publication date
2007/2/5
Source
Biopolymers: Original Research on Biomolecules
Volume
85
Issue
2
Pages
115-130
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Description
The mechanical properties of DNA play a critical role in many biological functions. For example, DNA packing in viruses involves confining the viral genome in a volume (the viral capsid) with dimensions that are comparable to the DNA persistence length. Similarly, eukaryotic DNA is packed in DNA–protein complexes (nucleosomes), in which DNA is tightly bent around protein spools. DNA is also tightly bent by many proteins that regulate transcription, resulting in a variation in gene expression that is amenable to quantitative analysis. In these cases, DNA loops are formed with lengths that are comparable to or smaller than the DNA persistence length. The aim of this review is to describe the physical forces associated with tightly bent DNA in all of these settings and to explore the biological consequences of such bending, as increasingly accessible by single‐molecule techniques. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
HG Garcia, P Grayson, L Han, M Inamdar, J Kondev… - Biopolymers: Original Research on Biomolecules, 2007