165 research outputs found
DNA-condensation, redissolution and mesocrystals induced by tetravalent counterions
The distance-resolved effective interaction potential between two parallel
DNA molecules is calculated by computer simulations with explicit tetravalent
counterions and monovalent salt. Adding counterions first yields an attractive
minimum in the potential at short distances which then disappears in favor of a
shallower minimum at larger separations. The resulting phase diagram includes a
DNA-condensation and redissolution transition and a stable mesocrystal with an
intermediate lattice constant for high counterion concentration.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
DNA condensation and redissolution: Interaction between overcharged DNA molecules
The effective DNA-DNA interaction force is calculated by computer simulations
with explicit tetravalent counterions and monovalent salt. For overcharged DNA
molecules, the interaction force shows a double-minimum structure. The
positions and depths of these minima are regulated by the counterion density in
the bulk. Using two-dimensional lattice sum and free energy perturbation
theories, the coexisting phases for DNA bundles are calculated. A
DNA-condensation and redissolution transition and a stable mesocrystal with an
intermediate lattice constant for high counterion concentration are obtained.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Phase diagram of aggregation of oppositely charged colloids in salty water
Aggregation of two oppositely charged colloids in salty water is studied. We
focus on the role of Coulomb interaction in strongly asymmetric systems in
which the charge and size of one colloid is much larger than the other one. In
the solution, each large colloid (macroion) attracts certain number of
oppositely charged small colloids (-ion) to form a complex. If the
concentration ratio of the two colloids is such that complexes are not strongly
charged, they condense in a macroscopic aggregate. As a result, the phase
diagram in a plane of concentrations of two colloids consists of an aggregation
domain sandwiched between two domains of stable solutions of complexes. The
aggregation domain has a central part of total aggregation and two wings
corresponding to partial aggregation. A quantitative theory of the phase
diagram in the presence of monovalent salt is developed. It is shown that as
the Debye-H\"{u}ckel screening radius decreases, the aggregation domain
grows, but the relative size of the partial aggregation domains becomes much
smaller. As an important application of the theory, we consider solutions of
long double-helix DNA with strongly charged positive spheres (artificial
chromatin). We also consider implications of our theory for in vitro
experiments with the natural chromatin. Finally, the effect of different shapes
of macroions on the phase diagram is discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures. The text is rewritten, but results are not
change
Temperature Effects on Threshold Counterion Concentration to Induce Aggregation of fd Virus
We seek to determine the mechanism of like-charge attraction by measuring the
temperature dependence of critical divalent counterion concentration
() for the aggregation of fd viruses. We find that an increase in
temperature causes to decrease, primarily due to a decrease in the
dielectric constant () of the solvent. At a constant ,
is found to increase as the temperature increases. The effects of
and on can be combined to that of one parameter:
Bjerrum length (). decreases exponentially as
increases, suggesting that entropic effect of counterions plays an important
role at the onset of bundle formation.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Recursive graphs with small-world scale-free properties
We discuss a category of graphs, recursive clique trees, which have
small-world and scale-free properties and allow a fine tuning of the clustering
and the power-law exponent of their discrete degree distribution. We determine
relevant characteristics of those graphs: the diameter, degree distribution,
and clustering parameter. The graphs have also an interesting recursive
property, and generalize recent constructions with fixed degree distributions.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Symmetries of Electrostatic Interaction between DNA Molecules
We study a model for pair interaction of DNA molecules generated by the
discrete dipole moments of base-pairs and the charges of phosphate groups, and
find noncommutative group of eighth order of symmetries that leave
invariant. We classify the minima using group and employ
numerical methods for finding them. The minima may correspond to several
cholesteric phases, as well as phases formed by cross-like conformations of
molecules at an angle close to , "snowflake phase". The results
depend on the effective charge of the phosphate group which can be modified
by the polycations or the ions of metals. The snowflake phase could exist for
above the threshold . Below there could be several cholesteric
phases. Close to the snowflake phase could change into the cholesteric
one at constant distance between adjacent molecules.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Molecular dynamics simulation of multivalent ion mediated DNA attraction
All atom molecular dynamics simulations with explicit water were done to
study the interaction between two parallel double-stranded DNA molecules in the
presence of the multivalent counterions putrescine (2+), spermidine (3+),
spermine (4+) and cobalt hexamine (3+). The inter-DNA interaction potential is
obtained with the umbrella sampling technique. The attractive force is
rationalized in terms of the formation of ion bridges, i.e. multivalent ions
which are simultaneously bound to the two opposing DNA molecules. The lifetime
of the ion bridges is short on the order of a few nanoseconds.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Physical Review Letter
Attractive Interactions Between Rod-like Polyelectrolytes: Polarization, Crystallization, and Packing
We study the attractive interactions between rod-like charged polymers in
solution that appear in the presence of multi-valence counterions. The
counterions condensed to the rods exhibit both a strong transversal
polarization and a longitudinal crystalline arrangement. At short distances
between the rods, the fraction of condensed counterions increases, and the
majority of these occupy the region between the rods, where they minimize their
repulsive interactions by arranging themselves into packing structures. The
attractive interaction is strongest for multivalent counterions. Our model
takes into account the hard-core volume of the condensed counterions and their
angular distribution around the rods. The hard core constraint strongly
suppresses longitudinal charge fluctuations.Comment: 4 figures, uses revtex, psfig and epsf. The new version contains a
different introduction, and the bibliography has been expande
Stabilization and Controlled Association of Inorganic Nanoparticles using Block Copolymers
We report on the structural properties of mixed aggregates made from
rare-earth inorganic nanoparticles (radius 20 Angstroms) and
polyelectrolyte-neutral block copolymers in aqueous solutions. Using scattering
experiments and Monte Carlo simulations, we show that these mixed aggregates
have a hierarchical core-shell microstructure. The core is made of densely
packed nanoparticles and it is surrounded by a corona of neutral chains. This
microstructure results from a process of controlled association and confers to
the hybrid aggregates a remarkable colloidal stability.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
The osmotic pressure of charged colloidal suspensions: A unified approach to linearized Poisson-Boltzmann theory
We study theoretically the osmotic pressure of a suspension of charged
objects (e.g., colloids, polyelectrolytes, clay platelets, etc.) dialyzed
against an electrolyte solution using the cell model and linear
Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) theory. From the volume derivative of the grand
potential functional of linear theory we obtain two novel expressions for the
osmotic pressure in terms of the potential- or ion-profiles, neither of which
coincides with the expression known from nonlinear PB theory, namely, the
density of microions at the cell boundary. We show that the range of validity
of linearization depends strongly on the linearization point and proof that
expansion about the selfconsistently determined average potential is optimal in
several respects. For instance, screening inside the suspension is
automatically described by the actual ionic strength, resulting in the correct
asymptotics at high colloid concentration. Together with the analytical
solution of the linear PB equation for cell models of arbitrary dimension and
electrolyte composition explicit and very general formulas for the osmotic
pressure ensue. A comparison with nonlinear PB theory is provided. Our analysis
also shows that whether or not linear theory predicts a phase separation
depends crucially on the precise definition of the pressure, showing that an
improper choice could predict an artificial phase separation in systems as
important as DNA in physiological salt solution.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, REVTeX4 styl
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