This paper presents experimental charge-density studies of cytosinium chloride, adeninium chloride hemihydrate and guaninium dichloride crystals based on ultra-high-resolution X-ray diffraction data and extensive theoretical calculations. The results confirm that the cohesive energies of the studied systems are dominated by contributions from intermolecular electrostatic interactions, as expected for ionic crystals. Electrostatic interaction energies () usually constitute 95% of the total interaction energy. The energies in this study were several times larger in absolute value when compared, for example, with dimers of neutral nucleobases. However, they were not as large as some theoretical calculations have predicted. This was because the molecules appeared not to be fully ionized in the studied crystals. Apart from charge transfer from chlorine to the protonated nucleobases, small but visible charge redistribution within the nucleobase cations was observed. Some dimers of singly protonated bases in the studied crystals, namely a cytosinium-cytosinium sugar/sugar edge pair and an adeninium-adeninium Hoogsteen/Hoogsteen edge pair, exhibited attractive interactions (negative values of ) or unusually low repulsion despite identical molecular charges. The pairs are metastable as a result of strong hydrogen bonding between bases which overcompensates the overall cation-cation repulsion, the latter being weakened due to charge transfer and molecular charge-density polarization.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S2052252518006346 | DOI Listing |
Biochemistry
December 2024
School of Environmental and Chemical Engineering, Xi'an Polytechnic University, Xi'an 710048, PR China.
The study focuses on the interaction between canonical uracil and its rare tautomers with Mg and MgCl in the microcosmic water environment and aims to elucidate how ions interact with nucleobase and the cation-anion correlation effect involved using density functional theory calculations. The structures of the Ura-Mg(HO) and Ura-MgCl(HO) clusters are characterized and show that the water molecules preferentially interact with Mg/MgCl, and Mg adopts a hexacoordination pattern in both Ura-Mg(HO) and Ura-MgCl(HO) clusters. When uracil interacts with Mg in (HO) environments, it tends to favor the formation of keto-enol structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDalton Trans
January 2025
Dipartimento di Farmacia, Università degli Studi "G. D'Annunzio" Chieti-Pescara, Via dei Vestini 31, 66100 Chieti, Italy.
Paddlewheel complexes of bimetallic scaffolds are emerging metallic agents in the bioinorganic chemistry landscape. In the most commonly employed construct, these complexes are decorated by the carboxylate moiety, prompting their possible deployment to target either protein or nucleic acid targets. In this study, density functional investigation was performed to assess viable mechanistic routes for the substitution of one acetate ligand with one chelating purine, adenine or guanine, in diruthenium and dirhodium tetraacetate paddlewheel complexes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
November 2024
Institute of Advanced Materials, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, Faculty of Chemistry, Wybrzeże Wyspiańskiego 27, 50-370 Wrocław, Poland.
In this work, several plausible intra- and intermolecular photoinduced processes of the Watson-Crick base pairs of adenine with uracil (A-U) or thymine (A-T) according to the results of spin component scaling variant of algebraic diagrammatic construction up to the second order [SCS-ADC(2)] calculations are discussed. Although widely explored, these systems lack complete characterization of possible intramolecular relaxation channels perturbed by intermolecular interactions. In particular, we address the still open debate on photodeactivation purine-ring puckering at the C2 or C6-atom position of adenine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
August 2024
Department of Nuclear Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto 615-8540, Japan.
We evaluated the dissociation of isolated gas-phase nucleobase molecules induced by mega electron volt (MeV)-energy ions to gain fundamental insights into the reactions of nucleobases upon fast ion irradiation. We studied five nucleobase molecules-adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, and uracil-as gas-phase targets. We compared the fragmentation patterns obtained from carbon ion impacts with those obtained from proton impacts to clarify the effect of heavy ion irradiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
June 2024
Laboratory for Biomolecular Simulation Research, Institute for Quantitative Biomedicine and Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
Rare tautomeric forms of nucleobases can lead to Watson-Crick-like (WC-like) mispairs in DNA, but the process of proton transfer is fast and difficult to detect experimentally. NMR studies show evidence for the existence of short-time WC-like guanine-thymine (G-T) mispairs; however, the mechanism of proton transfer and the degree to which nuclear quantum effects play a role are unclear. We use a B-DNA helix exhibiting a wGT mispair as a model system to study tautomerization reactions.
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