Abstract: | Polarized dynamic light-scattering measurements on superhelical pBR322-plasmid DNA solutions in 0.2M NaCl, 2 mM NaPi, pH 7.0, 2 mM EDTA result in a translational diffusion coefficient D = (3.77 ± 0.10) × 10?8 cm2/s for the native molecule. Modeling the DNA, in the simplest approximation, as a 10 × 440-nm effective hydrodynamic rigid rod yields a good fit to the apparent diffusion coefficient angular-dependence data up to 70°; the model fails at higher angles, probably due to the effects of flexibility or branching of the rod. Diffusion coefficient titration experiments with a platinum complex intercalating agent (PtTS) result in a titratable superhelix density of σ = ?0.079 ± 0.008 under our experimental conditions, corresponding to about 34 superhelical turns in the native DNA. The DNA contour length predicted by our two independent results, the rod dimensions and the number of superhelical turns, is in excellent agreement with the contour length calculated from the number of base pairs, supporting the hydrodynamic approximation of an effective rodlike structure for this small DNA molecule in solution. |