Abstract

The dense medium modulates the molecular structure and bioreactions in living cells via both noncovalent interactions and macromolecular crowding and confinement effects. However, the interplay between the volume effect and noncovalent interactions remains unclear. In this work, we studied in detail on how electrostatic interactions influence the crowding and confinement effect by comparing the formation and elongation of DNA nanotubes in branched dextran and charged hyaluronic acid (HA) solution of a broad concentration range, with and without 150 mM NaCl. In all the studied cases, three concentration regimes are identified: a crowding regime, a double-effect regime, and a confinement regime. In the crowding and double-effect regimes, the addition of 150 mM NaCl enhances the assembly of DNA tiles by screening the electrostatic repulsion, and a higher dextran solution is required to confine the DNA assembly into nanotubes. However, the screening effect on the HA network is more than that on the DNA assembly, so DNA tubes formed in HA solution at much lower concentrations. In the confinement regime, the electrostatic interaction exhibits a negligible effect on the DNA assembly in both dextran medium and HA medium. Our study demonstrates that the volume effect and noncovalent interactions are system specific and concentration dependent. Their interplay governs the living processes in crowded cells.

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