Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.109, No.8, 3676-3680, 2005
DNA condensation induced by cationic surfactant: A viscosimetry and dynamic light scattering study
The compaction of DNA induced by two simple amphiphiles, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide [CTAB] and dodecyldimethylarnine oxide [DDAO], has been investigated by means of combined viscosity and dynamic light scattering measurements, to demonstrate the formation of soluble DNA/surfactant complexes, undergoing a coil-globule transition, upon the increase of the amphiphile concentration. In both of the two systems investigated, the complexation process reaches a maximum for a value of the surfactant to DNA phosphate groups molar ratio of about X = 1. Below this critical concentration, the coil and the globule state coexist in the solution, as clearly shown by the bimodal size distribution obtained from the light scattering intensity correlation functions. Some suggestions are given to support a molecular mechanism responsible for the complex formation, both in the case of a cationic surfactant (CTAB) and of a pH-dependent neutral or cationic amphiphile (DDAO), where the hydrophobic interactions play an important role.