We report that atomic force microscopy (AFM) studies on structural
variations of a linear plasmid DNA interact with various concentrations
of vincristine sulfate and aspirin. The different binding images show
that vincrinstine sulfate binding DNA chains caused some loops and
cleavages of the DNA fragments, whereas aspirin interaction caused the
width changes and conformational transition of the DNA fragments. Two
different DNA structural alternations could be explained by the
different mechanisms of the interactions with these two components. Our
work indicates that the AFM is a powerful tool in studying the
interaction between DNA and small molecules.