4.5 Article

Pulling a DNA molecule through a nanopore embedded in an anionic membrane: tension propagation coupled to electrostatics

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 32, Issue 38, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-648X/ab9342

Keywords

biomolecule; electrostatics; translocation; nanopore

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland through its PolyDyna [307806]
  2. QFT Center of Excellence Program Grants [312298]

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We consider the influence of electrostatic forces on driven translocation dynamics of a flexible polyelectrolyte being pulled through a nanopore by an external force on the head monomer. To this end, we augment the iso-flux tension propagation theory with electrostatics for a negatively charged biopolymer pulled through a nanopore embedded in a similarly charged anionic membrane. We show that in the realistic case of a single-stranded DNA molecule, dilute salt conditions characterized by weak charge screening, and a negatively charged membrane, the translocation dynamics is unexpectedly accelerated despite the presence of large repulsive electrostatic interactions between the polymer coil on the cis side and the charged membrane. This is due to the rapid release of the electrostatic potential energy of the coil during translocation, leading to an effectively attractive force that assists end-driven translocation. The speedup results in non-monotonic polymer length and membrane charge dependence of the exponent alpha characterizing the translocation time tau proportional to N-0(alpha) of the polymer with length N-0. In the regime of long polymers N-0 greater than or similar to 500, the translocation exponent exceeds its upper limit alpha = 2 previously observed for the same system without electrostatic interactions.

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