435 research outputs found
A Generalized Theory of Semiflexible Polymers
NA bending on length scales shorter than a persistence length plays an integral role in the translation of genetic information from DNA to cellular function. Quantitative experimental studies of these biological systems have led to a renewed interest in the polymer mechanics relevant for describing the conformational free energy of DNA bending induced by protein-DNA complexes. Recent experimental results from DNA cyclization studies have cast doubt on the applicability of the canonical semiflexible polymer theory, the wormlike chain (WLC) model, to DNA bending on biologically relevant length scales. This paper develops a theory of the chain statistics of a class of generalized semiflexible polymer models. Our focus is on the theoretical development of these models and the calculation of experimental observables. To illustrate our methods, we focus on a specific, illustrative model of DNA bending. We show that the WLC model generically describes the long-length-scale chain statistics of semiflexible polymers, as predicted by renormalization group arguments. In particular, we show that either the WLC or our present model adequately describes force-extension, solution scattering, and long-contour-length cyclization experiments, regardless of the details of DNA bend elasticity. In contrast, experiments sensitive to short-length-scale chain behavior can in principle reveal dramatic departures from the linear elastic behavior assumed in the WLC model. We demonstrate this explicitly by showing that our toy model can reproduce the anomalously large short-contour-length cyclization factors recently measured by Cloutier and Widom. Finally, we discuss the applicability of these models to DNA chain statistics in the context of future experiments
Biological Consequences of Tightly Bent DNA: The Other Life of a Macromolecular Celebrity
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.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figure
The one-message-per-cell-cycle rule: A conserved minimum transcription level for essential genes
The inherent stochasticity of cellular processes leads to significant
cell-to-cell variation in protein abundance. Although this noise has already
been characterized and modeled, its broader implications and significance
remain unclear. In this paper, we revisit the noise model and identify the
number of messages transcribed per cell cycle as the critical determinant of
noise. In yeast, we demonstrate that this quantity predicts the non-canonical
scaling of noise with protein abundance, as well as quantitatively predicting
its magnitude. We then hypothesize that growth robustness requires an upper
ceiling on noise for the expression of essential genes, corresponding to a
lower floor on the transcription level. We show that just such a floor exists:
a minimum transcription level of one message per cell cycle is conserved
between three model organisms: Escherichia coli, yeast, and human. Furthermore,
all three organisms transcribe the same number of messages per gene, per cell
cycle. This common transcriptional program reveals that robustness to noise
plays a central role in determining the expression level of a large fraction of
essential genes, and that this fundamental optimal strategy is conserved from
E. coli to human cells.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
Extensive Chaos in the Lorenz-96 Model
We explore the high-dimensional chaotic dynamics of the Lorenz-96 model by
computing the variation of the fractal dimension with system parameters. The
Lorenz-96 model is a continuous in time and discrete in space model first
proposed by Edward Lorenz to study fundamental issues regarding the forecasting
of spatially extended chaotic systems such as the atmosphere. First, we explore
the spatiotemporal chaos limit by increasing the system size while holding the
magnitude of the external forcing constant. Second, we explore the strong
driving limit by increasing the external forcing while holding the system size
fixed. As the system size is increased for small values of the forcing we find
dynamical states that alternate between periodic and chaotic dynamics. The
windows of chaos are extensive, on average, with relative deviations from
extensivity on the order of 20%. For intermediate values of the forcing we find
chaotic dynamics for all system sizes past a critical value. The fractal
dimension exhibits a maximum deviation from extensivity on the order of 5% for
small changes in system size and decreases non-monotonically with increasing
system size. The length scale describing the deviations from extensivity and
the natural chaotic length scale are approximately equal in support of the
suggestion that deviations from extensivity are due to the addition of chaotic
degrees of freedom as the system size is increased. As the forcing is increased
at constant system size the fractal dimension exhibits a power-law dependence.
The power-law behavior is independent of the system size and quantifies the
decreasing size of chaotic degrees of freedom with increased forcing which we
compare with spatial features of the patterns.Comment: 12 pages, 20 figure
A generalized theory of semiflexible polymers
DNA bending on length scales shorter than a persistence length plays an
integral role in the translation of genetic information from DNA to cellular
function. Quantitative experimental studies of these biological systems have
led to a renewed interest in the polymer mechanics relevant for describing the
conformational free energy of DNA bending induced by protein-DNA complexes.
Recent experimental results from DNA cyclization studies have cast doubt on the
applicability of the canonical semiflexible polymer theory, the wormlike chain
(WLC) model, to DNA bending on biological length scales. This paper develops a
theory of the chain statistics of a class of generalized semiflexible polymer
models. Our focus is on the theoretical development of these models and the
calculation of experimental observables. To illustrate our methods, we focus on
a specific toy model of DNA bending. We show that the WLC model generically
describes the long-length-scale chain statistics of semiflexible polymers, as
predicted by the Renormalization Group. In particular, we show that either the
WLC or our new model adequate describes force-extension, solution scattering,
and long-contour-length cyclization experiments, regardless of the details of
DNA bend elasticity. In contrast, experiments sensitive to short-length-scale
chain behavior can in principle reveal dramatic departures from the linear
elastic behavior assumed in the WLC model. We demonstrate this explicitly by
showing that our toy model can reproduce the anomalously large
short-contour-length cyclization J factors observed by Cloutier and Widom.
Finally, we discuss the applicability of these models to DNA chain statistics
in the context of future experiments
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