The research described in this product was performed in part in the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a national scientific user facility sponsored by the Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research and located at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Anionic states of nucleic acid bases are involved in DNA damage by
low-energy electrons and in charge transfer through DNA. Previous
gas phase studies of free, unsolvated nucleic acid base parent
anions probed only dipole-bound states, which are not present in
condensed phase environments, but did not observe valence anionic
states, which for purine bases are thought to be adiabatically
unbound. Contrary to this expectation,wehave demonstrated that
some thus far ignored tautomers of adenine, which result from
enamine-imine transformations, support valence anionic states
with electron vertical detachment energies as large as 2.2 eV, and
at least one of these anionic tautomers is adiabatically bound.
Moreover, we predict that the new anionic tautomers should also
dominate in solutions and should be characterized by larger values
of electron vertical detachment energy than the canonical valence
anion. All of the newfound anionic tautomers might be formed in
the course of dissociative electron attachment followed by a
hydrogen atom attachment to a carbon atom, and they might
affect the structure and properties of DNA and RNA exposed to
low-energy electrons. The new valence states observed here,
unlike the dipole-bound state, could exist in condensed phases and
might be relevant to radiobiological damage. The discovery of
these valence anionic states of adenine was facilitated by the
development of (i) an experimental method for preparing parent
anions of nucleic acid bases for photoelectron experiments, and (ii)
a combinatorial/quantum chemical approach for identification of
the most stable tautomers of organic molecules.
Revised: April 7, 2011 |
Published: March 20, 2007
Citation
Haranczyk M., M.S. Gutowski, X. Li, and K.H. Bowen. 2007.Bound Anionic States of Aadenine.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104, no. 12:4804-4807. doi:10.1073/pnas.0609982104