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Department of Energy Science and Engineering
CMMM Lab(Curious Minds Molecular Modeling Laboratory)
1. Journal Articles
Understanding the origin of liquid crystal ordering of ultrashort double-stranded DNA
Saurabh, Suman
;
Lansac, Yves
;
Jang, Yun Hee
;
Glaser, Matthew A.
;
Clark, Noel A.
;
Maiti, Prabal K.
Department of Energy Science and Engineering
CMMM Lab(Curious Minds Molecular Modeling Laboratory)
1. Journal Articles
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Title
Understanding the origin of liquid crystal ordering of ultrashort double-stranded DNA
DGIST Authors
Saurabh, Suman
;
Lansac, Yves
;
Jang, Yun Hee
;
Glaser, Matthew A.
;
Clark, Noel A.
;
Maiti, Prabal K.
Issued Date
2017-03
Citation
Saurabh, Suman. (2017-03). Understanding the origin of liquid crystal ordering of ultrashort double-stranded DNA. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.95.032702
Type
Article
Article Type
Article
Keywords
Abiotic Ligation
;
Attraction
;
Crystalline Materials
;
Crystallization
;
Double Helix
;
Double Stranded DNA (DS DNA)
;
Double Stranded DNA
;
Duplexes
;
Liquid Crystalline Phasis
;
Liquid Crystalline
;
Liquid Crystals (LCs)
;
Liquids
;
Molecular Dynamics Simulations
;
Molecular Dynamics
;
Molecular Dynamics Simulations
;
Monovalent
;
Oligomers
;
Phase Transitions
;
Salt Concentration
;
Sequencesanisotropy
;
Supramolecular Columns
;
Thermodynamic Feasibility
ISSN
2470-0045
Abstract
Recent experiments have shown that short double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) fragments having six- to 20-base pairs exhibit various liquid crystalline phases. This violates the condition of minimum molecular shape anisotropy that analytical theories demand for liquid crystalline ordering. It has been hypothesized that the liquid crystalline ordering is the result of end-to-end stacking of dsDNA to form long supramolecular columns which satisfy the shape anisotropy criterion necessary for ordering. To probe the thermodynamic feasibility of this process, we perform molecular dynamics simulations on ultrashort (four base pair long) dsDNA fragments, quantify the strong end-to-end attraction between them, and demonstrate that the nematic ordering of the self-assembled stacked columns is retained for a large range of temperature and salt concentration. © 2017 American Physical Society.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/4216
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevE.95.032702
Publisher
American Physical Society
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