Singular value decomposition of 3-D DNA melting curves reveals complexity in the melting process

Abstract
The thermal denaturation of synthetic deoxypolynucleotides of defined sequence was studied by a three dimensional melting technique in which complete UV absorbance spectra were recorded as a function of temperature. The results of such an experiment defined a surface bounded by absorbance, wavelength, and temperature. A matrix of the experimental data was built, and analyzed by the method of singular value decomposition (SVD). SVD provides a rigorous, model-free analytical tool for evaluating the number of significant spectral species required to account for the changes in UV absorbance accompany-ing the duplex – to – single strand transition. For all of the polynucleotides studied (Poly dA – Poly dT; [Poly (dAdT)]2; Poly dG – Poly dC; [Poly(dGdC)]2), SVD indicated the existence of at least 4 – 5 significant spectral species. The DNA melting transition for even these simple repeating sequences cannot, therefore, be a simple two-state process. The basis spectra obtained by SVD analysis were found to be unique for each polynucleotide studied. Differential scanning calorimetry was used to obtain model free estimates for the enthalpy of melting for the polynucleotides studied, with results in good agreement with previously published values.

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