The electrophoresis of circular DNA, ranging in size from 4.4 kilobase pairs (kbp) to 220 kbp, was studied in agarose gels. Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) DNA was used as a source of large supercoiled and open circular (relaxed) forms. The open circles above approximately 50 kbp were trapped at the sample wells of 1% agarose gels during electrophoresis at 3 V/cm. Field inversion gel electrophoresis (FIGE) was used to relieve the trapping of the open circles in the gels. Using FIGE (30 s forward pulse time), open circles with sizes of 115 and 220 kbp required reverse pulse times of 3 and 6 s, respectively, to free the circles from open-ended gel fibers. A minimum in the gel velocity of the open circles was measured at approximately 20 kbp. Open circles below approximately 20 kbp migrated slower than the supercoiled forms, and above 20 kbp the order was reversed. These results indicate that when the size of the open circles exceeded the average pore size of a gel and it was forced to span multiple pores, the open circles gained a mobility advantage. Decreasing the ionic strength of the electrophoresis buffer significantly decreased the mobility of the smaller circles and slightly increased the mobility of the larger circles.
The effect of adding linear polymers to a novel reversible electrophoretic was measured. Reversible gels are formed using the polyanionic carbohydrate polymer, gellan gum. Gellan gum forms strong stable gels in the presence of divalent cations or diamines. The gels are reversible (return to solution) by changing the ionic environment or pH. Gellan gum is an anionic polymer, and the electrophoresis gels have considerable electroosmotic flow (EOF) toward the negative electrode. We measured the EOF in gellan gum electrophoresis gels as a function of gel concentration, buffer composition, and linear polymer additive. The linear polymers used in this study were polyethylene oxide and hydroxyethyl cellulose. Both polymers reduced EOF in the gels, in a manner dependent on molecular weight. Polymers with high molecular weight were more effective at reducing EOF. The addition of polymers increased the resolution of low molecular weight DNA. Native gellan gum resolved DNA from approx 50,000 to 1000 bp. Addition of the polymers resolved DNA down to approx 50 bp, in some instances. The influence of the polymers on circular plasmid DNA was also investigated. Addition of high molecular weight polyethylene oxide reduced the electrophoretic mobility of the nicked circular form compared to the supercoiled form.
No abstract
Starch preparations were added to agarose gels to enhance the electrophoretic trapping of circular plasmid DNA. The critical voltages required to trap the open circular (OC) and the supercoiled (SC) forms of a 13.1-kbp plasmid were measured in gels composed of agarose and added starch preparations. Modified starch preparations reduced the critical voltage required to trap the OC form of the plasmid to approximately one-third of the control value (in 1% agarose gels). Amylose (a fraction of starch with a low amount of branching) also reduced the critical voltage to trap the OC form in a similar manner. The critical voltage to trap the SC form of the plasmid was not significantly reduced by the starch preparations. The capacity to trap OC DNA was increased by the addition of higher amounts of the starch preparations added to the gels. Field inversion gel etectrophoresis was used to characterize the length of the traps in the gels. The starch preparations and amylose increased the trap lengths approximately twofold. The increased trap length correlated with the decreased critical voltage required to trap the OC form of the 13.1-kbp plasmid.
The retention of different physical forms of DNA by an electric field in a chromatography system was studied. We were able to effectively separate the supercoiled and the open circular forms of plasmid DNA using this type of electrochromatography system. Chromatography columns were packed with porous beads, and an axial electric field was applied so that convective buffer flow opposed the direction of electrophoresis of the DNA. A model system composed of approximately equal amounts of the super-coiled and open circular forms of the plasmid pBR 322 (4322 base pairs) was used to test the separation. Chromatography beads (agarose-based) with different porosities were used to determine the effect of the stationary phase on the separation. The porous media did not have a major effect on the separation, but the best separations were obtained using porous chromatography media made with the highest agarose concentration (10% agarose). Selective elution of plasmid DNA with different forms was obtained by either increasing the flow rates or decreasing the electric field strength (by steps or a gradient). In all the separations, the more compact supercoiled form of the plasmid was retained less strongly than either the open circular form (nicked) or the linear form. High molecular weight host genomic DNA was more strongly retained than the plasmid DNA. Increasing the ionic strength of the buffer improved resolution and capacity. The capacity of the separation was determined by injecting increasing amounts of plasmid DNA. Satisfactory separation was obtained at sample loading of up to 360 microg of total DNA on a column with dimensions of 2.5 by 11 cm (bed volume of 54 mL). The retention of DNA depends upon a counter-current flow of electrophoresis and convective flow and could be regarded as a type of field flow fractionation. The retention of the DNA by the electric field and flow is discussed in relation to the diffusion coefficients of the DNA.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.