Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.136, No.10, 4040-4047, 2014
Hydration Changes Accompanying Helix-to-Coil DNA Transitions
We applied ultrasonic velocimetric and high-precision densimetric measurements to characterizing the helix-to-coil transition of the GGCATTACGG/CCGTAATGCC decameric DNA duplex. The transition was induced either by temperature or by mixing the two complementary single strands at isothermal conditions. The duplex dissociation causes increases in volume and expansibility while resulting in a decrease in compressibility. Our volumetric data in conjunction with computer-generated structural information are consistent with the picture in which the duplex dissociation is accompanied by an uptake of similar to 180 water molecules from the bulk phase into the hydration shell of the DNA. Analysis of our compressibility and expansibility data reveals that the single-stranded conformation is likely to exist as a heterogeneous mixture of nearly isoenergetic subspecies differing in volume and enthalpy. We use our estimate of the change in hydration to evaluate the hydration and configurational contributions to the helix-to-coil transition entropy. The duplex dissociation is accompanied by an increase in configurational entropy, Delta S-conf, of similar to 23 cal mol(-1) K-1 per nucleotide, which signifies liberation of manifold frozen degrees of freedom involved in maintaining the conformational stability of the duplex and the related stiffening of the heterocyclic bases and the sugar-phosphate backbone. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first experimental estimate of the change in configurational entropy associated with the helix-to-coil transition of a DNA.