346 8.3  Mechanics of Biopolymers

KEY POINT 8.6

There are fewer accessible microstates for high values of end-​to-​end extension

compared to low values for a stretched biopolymer resulting in an entropic restoring

force toward smaller extension values. The force scale required to straighten an FJC

runs from zero to ~kBT/​b.

The force response F of a biopolymer to a change in end-​to-​end extension r can be

characterized in the various models of elasticity described earlier. If the internal energy of

the biopolymer stays the same for all configurations (in other words that each segment in the

equivalent chain is infinitely rigid), then entropy is the only contribution to the Helmholtz

free energy A:

(8.49)

A R

TS R

k T

p n R

B

( ) = −

( ) =

(

)

ln

,

where p is the radial probability density function discussed in the previous section.

The restoring force experienced by a stretched molecule of end-​to-​end length R is then

given by

(8.50)

F

A

R

=

with a molecular stiffness k given by

(8.51)

k

F

R

=

Using the result for p for the GC model of Equation 8.44 indicates

(8.52)

A

k TR

R

b

B

= 3

2

2

max

Therefore, the GC restoring force is given by

(8.53)

F

k TR

R

b

GC

B

max

= 3

Thus, the GC molecular stiffness is given by

(8.54)

F

k T

nb

k T

R

GC

B

B

FJC

=

= 〈

3

3

2

2

This implies that a GC exhibits a constant stiffness with extension, that is, it obeys Hooke’s

law, with the stiffness proportional to the thermal energy scale of kBT and to the reciprocal

of b2. This is a key weakness with the GC model; a finite force response even after the bio­

polymer is stretched beyond its own contour length is clearly unphysical. The FJC and WLC

models are better for characterizing a biopolymer’s force response with extension. Evaluating

p for the FJC and WLC models is more complicated, but these ultimately indicate that, for

the FJC model,

(8.55)

R

R

F

b

k T

k T

F

b s

−

max

FJC

B

B

FJC

coth