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  • Title: Direct observation of essential DNA dynamics: melting and reformation of the DNA minor groove.
    Author: Banerjee D, Pal SK.
    Journal: J Phys Chem B; 2007 Sep 13; 111(36):10833-8. PubMed ID: 17676797.
    Abstract:
    The dynamics of bound water and ions present in the minor groove of a dodecamer DNA has been decoupled from that of the long-range twisting/bending of the DNA backbone, using the minor groove binder Hoechst 33258 as a fluorescence reporter in the picosecond-resolved time window. The bound water and ions are essential structural components of the minor groove and are destroyed with the destruction of the minor groove when the dodecamer melts at high temperatures and reforms on subsequent cooling of the melted DNA. The melting and rehybridization of the DNA has been monitored by the changes in secondary structure using circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. The change in the relaxation dynamics of the DNA has been studied with picosecond resolution at different temperatures, following the temperature-dependent melting and rehybridization profile of the dodecamer, using time-resolved emission spectra (TRES). At room temperature, the relaxation dynamics of DNA is governed by a 40 ps (30%) and a 12.3 ns (70%) component. The dynamics of bound water and ions present in the minor groove is characterized by the 40 ps component in the relaxation dynamics of the probe bound in the minor groove of the dodecamer DNA. Analyses of the TRES taken at different temperatures show that the contribution of this component decreases and ultimately vanishes with the destruction of the minor groove and reappears again with the reformation of the groove. The dynamical behavior of bound water molecules and ions of a genomic DNA (from salmon testes) at different temperatures is also found to be consistent with that of the dodecamer. The longer component of approximately 10 ns in the DNA dynamics is found to be associated with the long-range bending/twisting of the DNA backbone and the associated counterions. The transition from bound water to free water at the DNA surface, indicative of the change in the hydration number associated with each base pair, has also been ascertained in the case of the genomic DNA at different temperatures by employing densimetric and acoustic techniques.
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