AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the ultrafast dynamics of the hydrogen-bonded Guanine-Cytosine dimer in chloroform solution, particularly focusing on the transition to the Guanine→Cytosine charge transfer state (GC-CT).
  • After 50 femtoseconds, 30-40% of the excited state population transitions to the GC-CT state, indicating a rapid and efficient process that aligns with experimental findings.
  • The research highlights that the population of the GC-CT state is lower in solutions compared to the gas phase, attributing this to dynamic solvation effects, and emphasizes the importance of solute/solvent interactions in influencing population transfer.

Article Abstract

We study the ultrafast photoactivated dynamics of the hydrogen bonded dimer Guanine-Cytosine in chloroform solution, focusing on the population of the Guanine→Cytosine charge transfer state (GC-CT), an important elementary process for the photophysics and photochemistry of nucleic acids. We integrate a quantum dynamics propagation scheme, based on a linear vibronic model parameterized through time dependent density functional theory calculations, with four different solvation models, either implicit or explicit. On average, after 50 fs, 30∼40 % of the bright excited state population has been transferred to GC-CT. This process is thus fast and effective, especially when transferring from the Guanine bright excited states, in line with the available experimental studies. Independent of the adopted solvation model, the population of GC-CT is however disfavoured in solution with respect to the gas phase. We show that dynamical solvation effects are responsible for this puzzling result and assess the different chemical-physical effects modulating the population of CT states on the ultrafast time-scale. We also propose some simple analyses to predict how solvent can affect the population transfer between bright and CT states, showing that the effect of the solute/solvent electrostatic interactions on the energy of the CT state can provide a rather reliable indication of its possible population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9828530PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.202201731DOI Listing

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