Abstract
Nucleic acid double helices in their DNA, RNA, and DNA-RNA hybrid form play a fundamental role in biology and are main building blocks of artificial nanostructures, but how their properties depend on temperature remains poorly understood. Here, we report thermal dependence of dynamic bending persistence length, twist rigidity, stretch modulus, and twist-stretch coupling for DNA, RNA, and hybrid duplexes between 7°C and 47°C. The results are based on all-atom molecular dynamics simulations using different force field parameterizations. We first demonstrate that unrestrained molecular dynamics can reproduce experimentally known mechanical properties of the duplexes at room temperature. Beyond experimentally known features, we also infer the twist rigidity and twist-stretch coupling of the hybrid duplex. As for the temperature dependence, we found that increasing temperature softens all the duplexes with respect to bending, twisting, and stretching. The relative decrease of the stretch moduli is 0.003–0.004/°C, similar for all the duplex variants despite their very different stretching stiffness, whereas RNA twist stiffness decreases by 0.003/°C, and smaller values are found for the other elastic moduli. The twist-stretch couplings are nearly unaffected by temperature. The stretching, bending, and twisting stiffness all include an important entropic component. Relation of our results to the two-state model of DNA flexibility is discussed. Our work provides temperature-dependent elasticity of nucleic acid duplexes at the microsecond scale relevant for initial stages of protein binding.
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