skip to main content


Title: DNA topology dictates emergent bulk elasticity and hindered macromolecular diffusion in DNA-dextran composites
Polymer architecture plays critical roles in both bulk rheological properties and microscale macromolecular dynamics in entangled polymer solutions and composites. Ring polymers, in particular, have been the topic of much debate due to the inability of the celebrated reptation model to capture their observed dynamics. Macrorheology and differential dynamic microscopy (DDM) are powerful methods to determine entangled polymer dynamics across scales; yet, they typically require different samples under different conditions, preventing direct coupling of bulk rheological properties to the underlying macromolecular dynamics. Here, we perform macrorheology on composites of highly overlapping DNA and dextran polymers, focusing on the role of DNA topology (rings versus linear chains) as well as the relative volume fractions of DNA and dextran. On the same samples under the same conditions, we perform DDM and single-molecule tracking on embedded fluorescent-labeled DNA molecules immediately before and after bulk measurements. We show DNA-dextran composites exhibit unexpected nonmonotonic dependences of bulk viscoelasticity and molecular-level transport properties on the fraction of DNA comprising the composites, with characteristics that are strongly dependent on the DNA topology. We rationalize our results as arising from stretching and bundling of linear DNA versus compaction, swelling, and threading of rings driven by dextran-mediated depletion interactions.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1919429 2050846
NSF-PAR ID:
10342684
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Journal of Rheology
Volume:
66
Issue:
4
ISSN:
0148-6055
Page Range / eLocation ID:
699 to 715
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract

    Polymer topology, which plays a principal role in the rheology of polymeric fluids, and non‐equilibrium materials, which exhibit time‐varying rheological properties, are topics of intense investigation. Here, composites of circular DNA and dextran are pushed out‐of‐equilibrium via enzymatic digestion of DNA rings to linear fragments. These time‐resolved rheology measurements reveal discrete state‐switching, with composites undergoing abrupt transitions between dissipative and elastic‐like states. The gating time and lifetime of the elastic‐like states, and the magnitude and sharpness of the transitions, are surprisingly decorrelated from digestion rates and non‐monotonically depend on the DNA fraction. These results are modeled using sigmoidal two‐state functions to show that bulk state‐switching can arise from continuous molecular‐level activity due to the necessity for cooperative percolation of entanglements to support macroscopic stresses. This platform, coupling the tunability of topological composites with the power of enzymatic reactions, may be leveraged for diverse material applications from wound‐healing to self‐repairing infrastructure.

     
    more » « less
  2. Blends of polymers of different topologies, such as ring and supercoiled, naturally occur in biology and often exhibit emergent viscoelastic properties coveted in industry. However, due to their complexity, along with the difficulty of producing polymers of different topologies, the dynamics of topological polymer blends remains poorly understood. We address this void by using both passive and active microrheology to characterize the linear and nonlinear rheological properties of blends of relaxed circular and supercoiled DNA. We characterize the dynamics as we vary the concentration from below the overlap concentration c* to above (0.5 c* to 2 c* ). Surprisingly, despite working at the dilute–semidilute crossover, entanglement dynamics, such as elastic plateaus and multiple relaxation modes, emerge. Finally, blends exhibit an unexpected sustained elastic response to nonlinear strains not previously observed even in well-entangled linear polymer solutions. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract How local stresses propagate through polymeric fluids, and, more generally, how macromolecular dynamics give rise to viscoelasticity are open questions vital to wide-ranging scientific and industrial fields. Here, to unambiguously connect polymer dynamics to force response, and map the deformation fields that arise in macromolecular materials, we present Optical-Tweezers-integrating-Differential -Dynamic-Microscopy (OpTiDMM) that simultaneously imposes local strains, measures resistive forces, and analyzes the motion of the surrounding polymers. Our measurements with blends of ring and linear polymers (DNA) and their composites with stiff polymers (microtubules) uncover an unexpected resonant response, in which strain alignment, superdiffusivity, and elasticity are maximized when the strain rate is comparable to the entanglement rate. Microtubules suppress this resonance, while substantially increasing elastic storage, due to varying degrees to which the polymers buildup, stretch and flow along the strain path, and configurationally relax induced stress. More broadly, the rich multi-scale coupling of mechanics and dynamics afforded by OpTiDDM, empowers its interdisciplinary use to elucidate non-trivial phenomena that sculpt stress propagation dynamics–critical to commercial applications and cell mechanics alike. 
    more » « less
  4. The considerable interest in two-dimensional (2D) materials and complex molecular topologies calls for a robust experimental system for single-molecule studies. In this work, we study the equilibrium properties and deformation response of a complex DNA structure called a kinetoplast, a 2D network of thousands of linked rings akin to molecular chainmail. Examined in good solvent conditions, kinetoplasts appear as a wrinkled hemispherical sheet. The conformation of each kinetoplast is dictated by its network topology, giving it a unique shape, which undergoes small-amplitude thermal fluctuations at subsecond timescales, with a wide separation between fluctuation and diffusion timescales. They deform elastically when weakly confined and swell to their equilibrium dimensions when the confinement is released. We hope that, in the same way that linear DNA became a canonical model system on the first investigations of its polymer-like behavior, kinetoplasts can serve that role for 2D and catenated polymer systems.

     
    more » « less
  5. Abstract

    This work reports that the rheology of ideally monodisperse lambda () phage DNA solutions is extremely sensitive to the applied strain in dynamic oscillatory experiments. DNA exhibits nonlinearity at strains far smaller than what is observed in conventional synthetic polymers. However, it is found that polydisperse calf thymus DNA does not exhibit the extreme strain sensitivity. By mixing samples of monodisperse DNA with the polydisperse calf thymus DNA, we correlate the molecular weight distribution (or polydispersity) to the onset of nonlinear viscoelasticity. We demonstrate that the strain sensitivity weakens as the polydispersity index increases. This is the first work correlating the inception of nonlinear viscoelasticity in entangled polymer system such as lambda DNA solution to the polydispersity of the samples. The experimental data suggests that ideally monodisperse polymer systems are very sensitive to the applied strain and have a very early transition to the nonlinear regime. We conclude that nominally monodisperse synthetic polymers are not sufficiently monodispersed to exhibit the early onset.

     
    more » « less