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For decades, scientists assumed that when DNA got stuck during high-speed sequencing, it was tangled into knots. But a groundbreaking study from the University of Cambridge has revealed something far more elegant — and far more surprising. Those "knots" aren't knots at all. They're plectonemes, dynamic coils that form when DNA is twisted under pressure, like a telephone cord spiraling under tension. And this discovery doesn't just change how we read DNA — it may rewrite our understanding of how genes turn on, how cells divide, and even how diseases take hold.
This isn't just a quirk of laboratory experiments. Inside your body, DNA is constantly being pulled, copied, and twisted as cells grow and repair themselves. When that twisting goes wrong, it can disrupt how genes function, potentially leading to cancer, neurological disorders, or developmental defects. The new findings, published in Physical Review X, suggest that these coils — once dismissed as mere noise in data — could be critical players in the drama of life itself. If scientists can learn to read these twists like a language, they might unlock new ways to diagnose diseases, design drugs, or even edit genes with precision.