Conformational dynamics of DNA-electrophoresis on cationic membranes

Kahl V, Hennig M, Maier B, Radler JO

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

The conformational dynamics of DNA molecules undergoing electrophoresis on a fluid substrate-supported cationic lipid bilayer is investigated using fluorescence microscopy. At low electrophoretic velocities, drift of 2-D random coils is observed. In contrast, at velocities larger than 0.3 mu m/s, the DNA molecules stretch out and assume branched configurations. The cross-over scenario is explained by the observation that cationic lipids segregate underneath the adsorbed DNA and confine the DNA to its counter charge imprint on time scales shorter than the relaxation time of the imprint. The concept of a tube-like confinement of the DNA is corroborated by the observed 1/N size dependence of the electrophoretic mobility in analogy to the biased reptation model in gels. The role of membrane defects and possible applications of membrane-based electrophoresis in microfluidic devices are discussed.

Details about the publication

JournalElectrophoresis
Volume30
Issue8
Page range1276-1281
StatusPublished
Release year2009 (30/04/2009)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1002/elps.200800430
Keywords2D-Electrophoresis Biased reptation DNA-reptation Supported lipid bilayer gel-electrophoresis lipid-bilayers 2 dimensions fluorescence microscopy cyclic migration biased reptation molecules mobility polymer model

Authors from the University of Münster

Maier, Berenike
Institute for Molecular Cell Biology