Abstract

A kinetoplast is a complex catenated DNA network that bears resemblance to a two-dimensional polymeric system. In this work, we use single-molecule experiments to study the transient and steady-state deformation of kinetoplasts in a planar elongational field. We demonstrate that kinetoplasts deform in a stagewise manner and undergo transient deformation at large strains, due to conformational rearrangements from an intermediate metastable state. Kinetoplasts in an elongational field achieve a steady-state deformation that depends on strain rate, akin to the deformation of linear polymers. We do not observe an abrupt transition between the nondeformed and deformed states of a kinetoplast, in contrast to the coil-stretch transition for a linear polymer.

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