Effect of Inert Tails on the Thermodynamics of DNA Hybridization

Abstract

The selective hybridization of DNA is of key importance for many practical applications such as gene detection and DNA-mediated self-assembly. These applications require a quantitative prediction of the hybridization free energy. Existing methods ignore the effects of non-complementary ssDNA tails beyond the first unpaired base. We use experiments and simulations to show that the binding strength of complementary ssDNA oligomers is altered by these sequences of non-complementary nucleotides. Even a small number of non-binding bases are enough to raise the hybridization free energy by approximately 1 kcal/mol at physiological salt concentrations. We propose a simple analytical expression that accounts quantitatively for this variation as a function of tail length and salt concentration. © 2014 American Chemical Society.SCOPUS: ar.jSCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

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Last time updated on 23/02/2017

This paper was published in DI-fusion.

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