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The use of gel and capillary electrophoresis to investigate some of the fundamental physical properties of DNA (Articolo in rivista)
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- Label
- The use of gel and capillary electrophoresis to investigate some of the fundamental physical properties of DNA (Articolo in rivista) (literal)
- Anno
- 2002-01-01T00:00:00+01:00 (literal)
- Alternative label
Stellwagen N., Gelfi C., Righetti Pg. (2002)
The use of gel and capillary electrophoresis to investigate some of the fundamental physical properties of DNA
in Electrophoresis (Weinh., Print)
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- Stellwagen N., Gelfi C., Righetti Pg. (literal)
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- Titolo
- The use of gel and capillary electrophoresis to investigate some of the fundamental physical properties of DNA (literal)
- Abstract
- Electrophoresis is a powerful technique which can be used not only for the
size-based separation of DNA in slab gels and sieving liquid polymers, but
also for the analysis of sequence-dependent variations in DNA conformation
and structure. Polyacrylamide gels are useful for conformational analysis,
because bent or curved DNA molecules migrate anomalously slowly in this
gel medium. Bending is often (but not always) associated with runs of
adenine residues (A-tracts) that occur in phase with the helix repeat. The
unique structure responsible for DNA bending \"melts out\" at a temperature
considerably below that of strand separation. The circular permutation
assay is another polyacrylamide gel-based method of detecting bending. It
has usually been applied to small restriction fragments, but can also be
used to detect bending in plasmid-sized DNA molecules. The apparent bends
in plasmid DNAs tend to be located near biologically important regions of
the sequence, such as the origin of replication, the start site of
transcription, and the promoters of certain genes. Finally, capillary
electrophoresis in free solution (without sieving liquid polymers) can be
used to determine the diffusion coefficients of small DNA molecules,
detect DNA-buffer interactions, and analyze the sequence dependence of
counterion binding. Counterions appear to be preferentially bound to DNA
oligomers containing A-tracts, especially the A(n)T(n) sequence motif.
Typical examples of these applications of gel and capillary
electrophoresis to the study of DNA conformation and structure are
described (literal)
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