In the past two decades, methods have been developed to pull on and twist individual DNA molecules, and the response of double-stranded DNA to applied forces and torques (i.e. molecules under twist) has been mapped out with increasing precision. In contrast, much less is known about the mechanical response of RNA, DNA’s molecular cousin. Chemically, RNA is very similar to DNA and like DNA, it can form a double-stranded helix. Yet in the cell, RNA carries our very different functions: RNA is a central player in translating the genetic information (stored in DNA) into proteins, which in turn carry out most metabolic functions in the cell. In addition, there are several more recently discovered mechanisms how RNA is involved in regulating the expression of genes, i.e. controlling the way the genetic code is executed.
Magnetic tweezersA  team of researchers led by Jan Lipfert (now at the LMU Munich) and  Nynke H. Dekker have used magnetic tweezers to determine how  double-stranded RNA responds to external forces and torques. In their  magnetic tweezers instruments, single double-stranded RNA molecules are  tethered. Using magnets, the researchers can apply precisely controlled  forces and twists to the RNA molecules.
They found that if the forces  and torques are not too large, double-stranded RNA bends and twists  elastically, like a rubber rod. However, when the forces and torques  become too large, the molecular structure rearranges and RNA undergoes -  sometimes dramatic - structural changes. From the measurements, the  elastic constants of double-stranded RNA were determined. The elastic  properties for bending, twisting, and stretching were found to be quite  similar to DNA. 
When the researchers  measured another elastic constant, the so-called twist-stretch  coupling, they made a surprising discovery: While DNA lengthens when the  helix is overwound, RNA shortens. Another surprise came when the  researchers used again magnetic tweezers to measure the dynamics of  forming a loop, where RNA exhibited 100-times slower dynamics than DNA.
Current  models of DNA and RNA fail to explain these surprising findings and the  current work poses an open challenge to molecular modeling approaches.
The  results present for the first time a complete picture of how  double-stranded RNA responds to forces and torques. They serve as a  baseline to model and understand RNA in more complex biological or  technological contexts and reveal unexpected properties of this key  building block in molecular biology.
“Double-stranded RNA under force and torque: Similarities to and striking differences from double-stranded DNA”
Jan  Lipfert, Gary M. Skinner, Johannes M. Keegstra, Toivo Hensgens, Tessa  Jager, David Dulin, Mariana KoĢber, Zhongbo Yu, Serge P. Donkers,  Fang-Chieh Chou, Rhiju Das, and Nynke H. Dekker
PNAS, published online October 13, 2014
Contact
Prof. Jan Lipfert
Department of Physics
LMU München
Amalienstr. 54
80799 München
Duitsland
jan.lipfert@lmu.de
+49-89-2180 2005
Prof. Nynke H. Dekker
Afdeling Bionanoscience
TU Delft
Lorentzweg 1
2628 CJ Delft
Nederland
n.h.dekker@tudelft.nl
015-2783219