1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0014-5793(99)00699-7
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DNA conformational dynamics in the presence of catanionic mixtures

Abstract: DNA conformational behavior in the presence of nonstoichiometric mixtures of two oppositely charged surfactants, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide and sodium octyl sulfate, was directly visualized in an aqueous solution with the use of a fluorescence microscopy technique. It was found that in the presence of cationic-rich catanionic mixtures, DNA molecules exhibit a conformational transition from elongated coil to compact globule states. Moreover, if the catanionic mixtures form positively charged vesicles, DNA i… Show more

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Cited by 82 publications
(72 citation statements)
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“…As we have seen a significant amount of experimental work in our group has been focused on the interaction between catanionic vesicles and DNA [94,58]. The interaction caused both a certain degree of compaction in the polymer backbone, as observed through fluorescence microscopy, and a change in the shape in the vesicles, consistent with the gelification of the latter.…”
Section: Interaction Between Polyelectrolytes and Catanionic Surfacesmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…As we have seen a significant amount of experimental work in our group has been focused on the interaction between catanionic vesicles and DNA [94,58]. The interaction caused both a certain degree of compaction in the polymer backbone, as observed through fluorescence microscopy, and a change in the shape in the vesicles, consistent with the gelification of the latter.…”
Section: Interaction Between Polyelectrolytes and Catanionic Surfacesmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The final concentrations (DNA 0.25 μM in terms of nucleotide units; DAPI 0.25 μM) were kept constant throughout the fluorescence microscopy experiments. This concentration of DNA corresponds to half the concentration that has been used in some of the previous studies [11,13,16,17,[22][23][24][25], which makes the visualization of individual DNA molecules easier via fluorescence microscopy in our recent equipment. We note that the number of chains simultaneously visible with such equipment largely exceeds those observed with older setups.…”
Section: Sample Preparationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chemical agents cause compaction by modifying electrostatic interactions between DNA segments, by modifying DNA-solvent interactions, by excluding volume to the worm-like coil (and/or counterions), by causing localized bending or distorsion of the helical structure, or by some combination of these effects. Compaction of DNA chains is induced in vitro by the addition of agents such as polyamines [8], multivalent metal cations [9], hydrophilic polymers [10], cationic polymers [11,12], catanionic liposomes [13], and cationic [14] and nonionic surfac-* Corresponding author. tants [15].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The vesicles are polydisperse with sizes in the approximate range of 0.05 to 0.5 µm although there are also a few larger ones; the larger ones can be visualized directly by light microscopy while the smaller ones have been conveniently studied by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (36,37). In our work we have introduced investigations of the interactions between these catanionic vesicles and DNA (38).…”
Section: Dna Is Compacted By Cationic Surfactantsmentioning
confidence: 99%