18 research outputs found

    Low angle light scattering studies on whole, half, and quarter molecules of T2 bacteriophage DNA.

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    Static light scattering measurements have been made at angles as low as 8 degrees on whole, half, and quarter molecules of native, T2 bacteriophage DNA in 0.195 M Na+. The fragments were obtained by high-speed stirring of the native DNA, and fractionated on methylated-albumin-kieselguhr columns. Accompanying measurements of sedimentation coefficients and intrinsic viscosities were made. Because linear extrapolations of light scattering data above 8 degrees for these samples were suspect, the measurements were analyzed by fitting curves calculated from the theory of wormlike coils to experimental curves at c = 0. Results showed that the excluded volume parameter, epsilon, must be used in analyzing the scattering curves; a reasonable value of epsilon was 0.08, in agreement with that found for T7 DNA (Harpst, J. A. 1980. Biophys. Chem. 11:295-302). The persistence length of all three DNAs in this paper was 50 +/- 5 nm, showed no dependence on molecular weight, but was somewhat below that reported previously for T7 DNA (60 nm). Theoretical curves calculated with the preceding parameters had a clear upward curvature in scattering envelopes below 8 degrees for quarter and half molecules, but such curvature was minimal for whole T2 DNA, so that linear extrapolations of experimental data above 8 degrees gave a molecular weight and root-mean-square radius which were nearly the same as those from theory. The molecular weight and radius for whole T2, derived from the comparison of theory and experiment, were 115 X 10(6) and 1,224 nm, respectively. The measurements on T2 DNA were clearly at the upper limit of current techniques

    CLARIFICATION OF NATIVE DNA SOLUTIONS BY FILTRATION

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    Physical properties of nucleoprotein cores from adenovirus type 5.

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    Analytical ultracentrifugation, thermal denaturation, and electron microscopy have been used to study nucleoprotein core particles, obtained from disrupted type 5 adenovirus and partially purified on glycerol density gradients. Electron microscopy at low salt concentrations has shown that the cores are homogeneous particles with characteristic structures, which vary with conditions of observation from a fairly loose network of fibers to a highly condensed, compact particle. Sedimentation measurements in the analytical ultracentrifuge, both by boundary and by band techniques, show that the cores are relatively homogeneous in solution and have sedimentation coefficients near 185 S at low salt concentrations, about 243 S in 1 or 2 M NaCl, and 376 S in 1 mM MgCl2. Correlation of sedimentation data with electron microscopic observations suggests that the 185 S particle has a loose, fibrous structure, while the faster species are more highly condensed particles. The melting temperature of the cores in 5 mM Tris/HCl is 79 degrees C, which is 10 degrees C higher than the Tm for purified, viral DNA. This indicates that the protein enhances the stability of DNA in the nucleoprotein complex

    Diffusion in the System Cyclohexane—Benzene

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    Electron Microscopy of Adenovirus Cores

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