Counterintuitive DNA destabilization by monovalent salt at high concentrations due to overcharging

Chen Zhang, Fu-Jia Tian, Hong-Wei Zuo, Qi-Yuan Qiu, Jia-Hao Zhang, Wei Wei, Zhi-Jie Tan, Yan Zhang*, Wen-Qiang Wu*, Liang Dai*, Xing-Hua Zhang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
19 Downloads (CityUHK Scholars)

Abstract

Monovalent salts are generally believed to stabilize DNA duplex by weakening inter-strand electrostatic repulsion. Unexpectedly, our force-induced hairpin unzipping experiments and thermal melting experiments show that LiCl, NaCl, KCl, RbCl, and CsCl at concentrations beyond ~1 M destabilize DNA, RNA, and RNA-DNA duplexes. The two types of experiments yield different changes in free energy during melting, while the results that high concentration monovalent salts destabilize duplexes are common. The effects of these monovalent ions are similar but also have noticeable differences. From 1 M to 4 M, DNA duplex is destabilized by about 0.3 kBT/bp and the melting temperature decreases by about 10 oC. Our all-atom simulations reveal this effect is caused by overcharging, where excessive ion absorption inverts the effective DNA charge from negative to positive. Furthermore, our coarse-grained simulations obtain a phase diagram that indicates whether DNA overcharging occurs at a given cation valence and concentration. These findings challenge the traditional belief that DNA overcharging occurs only with multivalent ions and have significant implications for polyelectrolyte theory, DNA nanomaterials, DNA nanotechnology, and DNA biophysics. © The Author(s) 2024.
Original languageEnglish
Article number113
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Online published2 Jan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Funding

We are grateful to financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 12074294 and 12374216 to X.-H.Z.; No. 12304254 to C.Z; No. 22273080 to L.D.), the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong (No. 11313322, 11307224 and PDFS2425-1S09), Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Fund (project no. 2022A1515010484), Super Computing Center of Wuhan University, and the National Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou. Open Access made possible with partial support from the Open Access Publishing Fund of the City University of Hong Kong.

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