Abstract

It has been shown in a preceding work that the fluorescence anisotropy decay of ethidium bromide-DNA complex is accelerated by energy migration between dyes bound to the same DNA molecule. In the present work, this result is confirmed. A quantitative analysis has been performed in the following way. The spectroscopic term of the transfer rate constant has been accurately reevaluated by quantum yield and spectral measurements. One assumes that the dye intercalates between two adjacent base pairs and that its distribution is random along the DNA molecule. One introduces the deformation angle δ of the DNA helix induced by the ethidium bromide intercalation. For several values of δ, the energy migration contribution to the anisotropy decay is computed by a Monte Carlo method. In multiplying these computed functions by the measured brownian anisotropy, one obtains the anisotropy decay curve. Comparison with the experimental data leads to the conclusion that the ethidium bromide molecule unwinds the DNA helix by an angle δ = −16°. This result is m agreement with the work of other authors. We think that the method used here may provide accurate information on the spatial distribution of an array of chromophores bound to a rigid structure.

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