Sixty DNA trinucleotide cation radicals covering a large part of the genetic code alphabet were generated by electron transfer in the gas phase, and their chemistry was studied by collision-induced dissociation tandem mass spectrometry and theoretical calculations. The major dissociations involved loss of nucleobase molecules and radicals, backbone cleavage, and cross-ring fragmentations that depended on the nature and position of the nucleobases. Mass identity in dissociations of symmetrical trinucleotide cation radicals of the (XXX+2H) and (XYX+2H) type was resolved by specific N labeling. The specific features of trinucleotide cation radical dissociations involved the dominant formation of ions, hydrogen atom migrations accompanying the formation of (+H), (+2H), and (+2H) sequence ions, and cross-ring cleavages in the 3'- and 5'-deoxyribose moieties that depended on the nucleobase type and its position in the ion. Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) and density functional theory calculations were used to obtain structures and energies of several cation-radical protomers and conformers for (AAA+2H), (CCC+2H), (GGG+2H), (ACA+2H), and (CAA+2H) that were representative of the different types of backbone dissociations. The ion electronic structure, protonation and radical sites, and hydrogen bonding were used to propose reaction mechanisms for the dissociations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jasms.2c00322 | DOI Listing |
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