Faculty Works
DNA–Surfactant Interactions: Coupled Cooperativity in Ligand Binding Leads to Duplex Stabilization
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-16-1999
Abstract
The cooperative nature of interaction of cationic surfactants with short oligonucleotides leading to eventual stabilization of DNA duplexes is demonstrated. At submicellar concentrations and DNA:surfactant charge ratios of 0.2 to 0.8, the association of single chain (CTAB) and double chain (DOTAP) surfactants to oligonucleotides is initiated by electrostatic interaction of cationic ligands with polyanionic DNA that aligns the surfactant molecules on the DNA template. This is followed by binding of new surfactant ligands to the initial complex, driven cooperatively by the hydrophobic forces, leading to in situ formation of surfactant-bound and bare duplexes as separate species. These exhibit independent melting behaviour characterised by double transition in thermal UV profiles, with a higher Tm for surfactant–DNA complexes. Understanding the cooperative binding of the cationic surfactants to the DNA described here may have implications for rational design of DNA binding drugs and DNA delivery systems.
Recommended Citation
Pattarkine, M., & Ganesh, K. N.
(1999). DNA–Surfactant Interactions: Coupled Cooperativity in Ligand Binding Leads to Duplex Stabilization. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 263 (1), 41-46.
Publication Title
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
Start Page No.
41
End Page No.
46
ISSN
0006-291X
DOI
10.1006/bbrc.1999.1266