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Dive into the research topics where Guillaume Witz is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillaume Witz.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Fractal dimension and localization of DNA knots

Erika Ercolini; Francesco Valle; Jozef Adamcik; Guillaume Witz; Ralf Metzler; Paolo De Los Rios; Joaquim Roca; Giovanni Dietler

The scaling properties of DNA knots of different complexities were studied by atomic force microscope. Following two different protocols DNA knots are adsorbed onto a mica surface in regimes of (i) strong binding, that induces a kinetic trapping of the three-dimensional (3D) configuration, and of (ii) weak binding, that permits (partial) relaxation on the surface. In (i) the radius of gyration of the adsorbed DNA knot scales with the 3D Flory exponent nu approximately 0.60 within error. In (ii), we find nu approximately 0.66, a value between the 3D and 2D (nu=3/4) exponents. Evidence is also presented for the localization of knot crossings in 2D under weak adsorption conditions.


FEBS Letters | 2006

Observation of single-stranded DNA on mica and highly oriented pyrolytic graphite by atomic force microscopy

Jozef Adamcik; Dmitry V. Klinov; Guillaume Witz; S. K. Sekatskii; Giovanni Dietler

Atomic force microscopy was used to image single‐stranded DNA (ssDNA) adsorbed on mica modified by Mg2+, by 3‐aminopropyltriethoxysilane or on modified highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). ssDNA molecules on mica have compact structures with lumps, loops and super twisting, while on modified HOPG graphite ssDNA molecules adopt a conformation without secondary structures. We have shown that the immobilization of ssDNA under standard conditions on modified HOPG eliminates intramolecular base‐pairing, thus this method could be important for studying certain processes involving ssDNA in more details.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

DNA supercoiling and its role in DNA decatenation and unknotting

Guillaume Witz; Andrzej Stasiak

Chromosomal and plasmid DNA molecules in bacterial cells are maintained under torsional tension and are therefore supercoiled. With the exception of extreme thermophiles, supercoiling has a negative sign, which means that the torsional tension diminishes the DNA helicity and facilitates strand separation. In consequence, negative supercoiling aids such processes as DNA replication or transcription that require global- or local-strand separation. In extreme thermophiles, DNA is positively supercoiled which protects it from thermal denaturation. While the role of DNA supercoiling connected to the control of DNA stability, is thoroughly researched and subject of many reviews, a less known role of DNA supercoiling emerges and consists of aiding DNA topoisomerases in DNA decatenation and unknotting. Although DNA catenanes are natural intermediates in the process of DNA replication of circular DNA molecules, it is necessary that they become very efficiently decatenated, as otherwise the segregation of freshly replicated DNA molecules would be blocked. DNA knots arise as by-products of topoisomerase-mediated intramolecular passages that are needed to facilitate general DNA metabolism, including DNA replication, transcription or recombination. The formed knots are, however, very harmful for cells if not removed efficiently. Here, we overview the role of DNA supercoiling in DNA unknotting and decatenation.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Conformation of Circular DNA in Two Dimensions

Guillaume Witz; Kristian Rechendorff; Jozef Adamcik; Giovanni Dietler

The conformation of circular DNA molecules of various lengths adsorbed in a 2D conformation on a mica surface is studied. The results confirm the conjecture that the critical exponent nu is topologically invariant and equal to the self-avoiding walk value (in the present case nu=3/4), and that the topology and dimensionality of the system strongly influence the crossover between the rigid regime and the self-avoiding regime at a scale L approximately 7l{p}. Additionally, the bond correlation function scales with the molecular length L as predicted. For molecular lengths L<or=5l{p}, circular DNA behaves like a stiff molecule with an approximately elliptic shape.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Interplay of DNA supercoiling and catenation during the segregation of sister duplexes

María Luisa Martínez-Robles; Guillaume Witz; Pablo Hernandez; Jorge Bernardo Schvartzman; Andrzej Stasiak; Dora B. Krimer

The discrete regulation of supercoiling, catenation and knotting by DNA topoisomerases is well documented both in vivo and in vitro, but the interplay between them is still poorly understood. Here we studied DNA catenanes of bacterial plasmids arising as a result of DNA replication in Escherichia coli cells whose topoisomerase IV activity was inhibited. We combined high-resolution two-dimensional agarose gel electrophoresis with numerical simulations in order to better understand the relationship between the negative supercoiling of DNA generated by DNA gyrase and the DNA interlinking resulting from replication of circular DNA molecules. We showed that in those replication intermediates formed in vivo, catenation and negative supercoiling compete with each other. In interlinked molecules with high catenation numbers negative supercoiling is greatly limited. However, when interlinking decreases, as required for the segregation of newly replicated sister duplexes, their negative supercoiling increases. This observation indicates that negative supercoiling plays an active role during progressive decatenation of newly replicated DNA molecules in vivo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Tightening of DNA knots by supercoiling facilitates their unknotting by type II DNA topoisomerases

Guillaume Witz; Giovanni Dietler; Andrzej Stasiak

Using numerical simulations, we compare properties of knotted DNA molecules that are either torsionally relaxed or supercoiled. We observe that DNA supercoiling tightens knotted portions of DNA molecules and accentuates the difference in curvature between knotted and unknotted regions. The increased curvature of knotted regions is expected to make them preferential substrates of type IIA topoisomerases because various earlier experiments have concluded that type IIA DNA topoisomerases preferentially interact with highly curved DNA regions. The supercoiling-induced tightening of DNA knots observed here shows that torsional tension in DNA may serve to expose DNA knots to the unknotting action of type IIA topoisomerases, and thus explains how these topoisomerases could maintain a low knotting equilibrium in vivo, even for long DNA molecules.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Cooperative kinking at distant sites in mechanically stressed DNA

Troy A. Lionberger; Davide Demurtas; Guillaume Witz; Julien Dorier; Todd D. Lillian; Edgar Meyhöfer; Andrzej Stasiak

In cells, DNA is routinely subjected to significant levels of bending and twisting. In some cases, such as under physiological levels of supercoiling, DNA can be so highly strained, that it transitions into non-canonical structural conformations that are capable of relieving mechanical stress within the template. DNA minicircles offer a robust model system to study stress-induced DNA structures. Using DNA minicircles on the order of 100 bp in size, we have been able to control the bending and torsional stresses within a looped DNA construct. Through a combination of cryo-EM image reconstructions, Bal31 sensitivity assays and Brownian dynamics simulations, we have been able to analyze the effects of biologically relevant underwinding-induced kinks in DNA on the overall shape of DNA minicircles. Our results indicate that strongly underwound DNA minicircles, which mimic the physical behavior of small regulatory DNA loops, minimize their free energy by undergoing sequential, cooperative kinking at two sites that are located about 180° apart along the periphery of the minicircle. This novel form of structural cooperativity in DNA demonstrates that bending strain can localize hyperflexible kinks within the DNA template, which in turn reduces the energetic cost to tightly loop DNA.


Nano Letters | 2010

Excluded Volume Effects on Semiflexible Ring Polymers

Fabian Drube; Karen Alim; Guillaume Witz; Giovanni Dietler; Erwin Frey

Two-dimensional semiflexible polymer rings are studied both by imaging circular DNA adsorbed on a mica surface and by Monte Carlo simulations of phantom polymers as well as of polymers with finite thickness. Comparison of size and shape of the different models over the full range of flexibilities shows that excluded volume caused by finite thickness induces an anisotropic increase of the main axes of the conformations, a change of shape, accomplished by an enhanced correlation along the contour.


EPL | 2010

Universal bond correlation function for two-dimensional polymer rings

Takahiro Sakaue; Guillaume Witz; Giovanni Dietler; Hirofumi Wada

The bond orientational correlation function (BCF) of a semiflexible ring polymer on a flat surface is studied theoretically. For a stiff chain, we give an exact analytic form of BCF with perturbation calculations. For a chain sufficiently longer than its persistence length, the conventional exponential decay vanishes and a long-range order along the chain contour appears. We demonstrate that the bond orientational correlation satisfies the scaling properties, and construct an interpolating formula for its universal curve that encompasses the short- and large-distance behaviors. Our analytical findings are confirmed by extensive Langevin dynamics simulations, and are in excellent agreement with recent experimental data obtained from DNA molecules imaged by atomic force microscopy without any fitting parameters.


Cell Cycle | 2011

DNA knots and DNA supercoiling

Guillaume Witz; Giovanni Dietler; Andrzej Stasiak

Comment on: Witz G, et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2011; 108:3608-11.

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Giovanni Dietler

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Kristian Rechendorff

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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A. J. Kulik

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Davide Demurtas

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Edgar Meyhöfer

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Harald Brune

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Joaquim Roca

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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