Heat Capacity Changes (ΔC p ) for Interconversions between Differentially-Ordered DNA States within Physiological Temperature Domains: Implications for Biological Regulatory Switches

Knowledge of differences in heat capacity changes (ΔC p ) between biopolymer states provides essential information about the temperature dependence of the thermodynamic properties of these states, while also revealing insights into the nature of the forces that drive the formation of functional and...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of physical chemistry. B Vol. 124; no. 27; pp. 5614 - 5625
Main Authors: Völker, Jens, Plum, G. Eric, Breslauer, Kenneth J
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States American Chemical Society 09-07-2020
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Knowledge of differences in heat capacity changes (ΔC p ) between biopolymer states provides essential information about the temperature dependence of the thermodynamic properties of these states, while also revealing insights into the nature of the forces that drive the formation of functional and dysfunctional biopolymer “order.” In contrast to proteins, for nucleic acids there is a dearth of direct experimental determination of this information-rich parameter, a deficiency that compromises interpretations of the ever-increasing thermodynamic analyses of nucleic acid properties; particularly as they relate to differential nucleic acid (meta)­stability states and their potential biological functions. Here we demonstrate that such heat capacity differences, in fact, exist not only between traditionally measured native to fully unfolded (assumed “random coil”) DNA states, but also between competing order-to-order transformations. We illustrate the experimental approach by measuring the heat capacity change between “native”/ordered, sequence homologous, “isomeric” DNA states that differ in conformation but not sequence. Importantly, these heat capacity differences occur within biologically relevant temperature ranges. In short, we describe a new and general method to measure the value of such heat capacity differences anywhere in experimentally accessible conformational and temperature space; in this case, between two metastable bulge loop states, implicated in DNA expansion diseases, and their competing, fully paired, thermodynamically more stable duplex states. This measurement reveals a ΔC p of 61 ± 7 cal molbp –1 K –1. Such heat capacity differences between competing DNA “native” ensemble states must be considered when evaluating equilibria between different DNA “ordered” conformations, including the assessment of the differential stabilizing forces and potential biological functions of competing DNA “structured” motifs.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:1520-6106
1520-5207
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c04065