Biopolymers exhibit rough energy landscapes, thereby allowing biological processes to access a broad range of kinetic and thermodynamic states. In contrast to proteins, the energy landscapes of nucleic acids have been the subject of relatively few experimental investigations. In this study, we use calorimetric and spectroscopic observables to detect, resolve, and selectively enrich energetically discrete ensembles of microstates within metastable DNA structures. Our results are consistent with metastable, ''native'' DNA states being composed of an ensemble of discrete and kinetically stable microstates of differential stabilities, rather than exclusively being a single, discrete thermodynamic species. This conceptual construct is important for understanding the linkage between biopolymer conformational/configurational space and biological function, such as in protein folding, allosteric control of enzyme activity, RNA and DNA folding and function, DNA structure and biological regulation, etc. For the specific DNA sequences and structures studied here, the demonstration of discrete, kinetically stable microstates potentially has biological consequences for understanding the development and onset of DNA expansion and triplet repeat diseases.calorimetry ͉ nucleic acid conformations T he concept of rough biopolymer energy landscapes is important for understanding biopolymer properties and function. Complex landscapes allow partial population of discrete, kinetically stable (metastable) species (1-12). These substates, in turn, may serve as biologically significant ligands, beyond the traditional, thermodynamically most stable, time-averaged, ''native'' macrostrate. Although it is well recognized that macroscopic states are composed of microscopic substates, it has been customary for experimentalists to think of a biologically relevant native state as a singular macrostate with a unique, well defined structure characterized by a homogeneous/smooth energy profile. Many biophysical measurements probe properties that are averaged over the ensemble of microstates that collectively correspond to a macroscopic native state. However, experimental evidence for the presence of, and dynamic interchange between, multiple states that constitute a global macrostate is provided by direct time-resolved measurements, and by structural dispersions in crystallographic and NMR studies (13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19)(20)(21)(22). Such results underscore the potential importance as ligands or receptors in biological mechanisms of kinetically stable, trapped microstates embedded within the rough energy landscapes of purportedly singular macrostates. For example, the detection of transiently populated structural states in the native unbound protein ensemble that resemble those of the proteins in their bound state provides evidence for the so-called ''conformational selection model'' of protein binding, thereby suggesting significant biological functions for microstates in proteins (23)(24)(25)(26).By contrast with proteins, relatively few stu...