Abstract: | The electrophoretic mobility of calf thymus DNA has been measured in aqueous buffered solutions as a function of pH. In the pH range 3.7–3.0, two electrophoretic species appear. The faster one migrates with the mobility of native DNA, the slower one migrates with a mobility close to that of thermally denatured DNA. The ratio of the two species varies with pH. Decreasing the pH increase the relative amount of the slower-moving component. These results may be interpreted by assuming that the DNA used in these experiments has a broad heterogeneity of base composition and that the conformational stability with respect to pH increases with increasing G + C content. |