One-electron oxidized guanine (G) in DNA generates several short-lived intermediate radicals via proton transfer reactions resulting in the formation of neutral guanine radicals. The identification of these radicals in DNA is of fundamental interest to understand the early stages of DNA damage. Herein, we used time-dependent density functional theory (TD-ωB97XD-PCM/6-31G(3df,p)) to calculate the vertical excitation energies of one-electron oxidized G and G-cytosine (C) base pair in various protonation states: G, G(N1-H), and G(N2-H), as well as G-C, G(N1-H)-(H)C, G(N1-H)-(N4-H)C), G(N1-H)-C, and G(N2-H)-C in aqueous phase. The calculated UV-vis spectra of these radicals are in good agreement with the experiment for the G radical species when the calculated values are red-shifted by 40-70 nm. The present calculations show that the lowest energy transitions of proton transfer species (G(N1-H)-(H)C, G(N1-H)-(N4-H)C, and G(N1-H)-C) are substantially red-shifted in comparison to the spectrum of G-C. The calculated spectrum of G(N2-H)-C shows intense absorption (high oscillator strength), which matches the strong absorption in the experimental spectra of G(N2-H) at 600 nm. The present calculations predict the lowest charge transfer transition of C → G is π → π* in nature and lies in the UV region (3.4-4.3 eV) with small oscillator strength.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6487651PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.9b00906DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

one-electron oxidized
12
base pair
8
density functional
8
functional theory
8
proton transfer
8
gn1-h-hc gn1-h-n4-hc
8
gn1-h-n4-hc gn1-h-c
8
oscillator strength
8
radicals
5
excited states
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!