Ar. Volkel et J. Noolandi, MOBILITIES OF LABELED AND UNLABELED SINGLE-STRANDED-DNA IN FREE SOLUTION ELECTROPHORESIS, Macromolecules, 28(24), 1995, pp. 8182-8189
Flexible polyelectrolytes of different sizes cannot be separated by fr
ee solution electrophoresis beyond a certain length exceeding a few mo
nomers. The reason for this size-independent mobility is the equal sca
ling of the drag and driving forces with the molecular size. By select
ively modifying the polyelectrolytes, this scaling symmetry can be bro
ken and a size-dependent mobility can be achieved. We investigate the
mobility of short flexible polyelectrolytes, such as single-stranded D
NA, with and without a neutral label the size of a single nucleic acid
. Numerical simulations allow us a systematic study of the microscopic
dynamics of these systems and the impact of the neutral label, which
is used to break the initial scaling symmetry, on the mobility. We fin
d a free rotation of all the polyelectrolytes under investigation due
to thermal fluctuations (this is in contrast to double-stranded DNA, w
here the fluctuations are less important due to its larger mass and ch
arge per persistence length and where alignment with the external fiel
d has been observed). The impact of the neutral label can be observed
as a systematic decrease of the mobility which becomes less pronounced
for increasing total molecular size. This suggests that attaching a s
hort neutral label will not allow for single base resolution of single
-stranded DNA in free solution. On the other hand, the shift of the mo
bility due to the neutral label can be significant enough to utilize t
his method as diagnostic tool by specifically labeling only single-str
anded DNA fragments with desired properties. Free solution electrophor
esis experiments using single-stranded DNA fragments and biotin and tr
imethoxytrityl modifications as neutral labels confirm the numerical r
esults.