Concentrated solutions of short blunt-ended DNA duplexes, down to 6 base
pairs, are known to order into the nematic liquid crystal phase. This
self-assembly is due to the stacking interactions between the duplex terminals
that promotes their aggregation into poly-disperse chains with a significant
persistence length. Experiments show that liquid crystals phases form above a
critical volume fraction depending on the duplex length. We introduce and
investigate via numerical simulations, a coarse-grained model of DNA
double-helical duplexes. Each duplex is represented as an hard quasi-cylinder
whose bases are decorated with two identical reactive sites. The stacking
interaction between terminal sites is modeled via a short-range square-well
potential. We compare the numerical results with predictions based on a free
energy functional and find satisfactory quantitative matching of the
isotropic-nematic phase boundary and of the system structure. Comparison of
numerical and theoretical results with experimental findings confirm that the
DNA duplexes self-assembly can be properly modeled via equilibrium
polymerization of cylindrical particles and enables us to estimate the stacking
energy