Modulation of the Directionality of Hole Transfer between the Base and the Sugar-Phosphate Backbone in DNA with the Number of Sulfur Atoms in the Phosphate Group.
Sergey A DenisovSamuel WardViacheslav ShcherbakovAlexander D StarkRenata KaczmarekEwa Radzikowska-CieciuraDipra DebnathTaisiya JacobsAnil KumarMichael D SevillaPascal PernotRoman DembinskiMehran MostafaviAmitava AdhikaryPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2022)
This work shows that S atom substitution in phosphate controls the directionality of hole transfer processes between the base and sugar-phosphate backbone in DNA systems. The investigation combines synthesis, electron spin resonance (ESR) studies in supercooled homogeneous solution, pulse radiolysis in aqueous solution at ambient temperature, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations of in-house synthesized model compound dimethylphosphorothioate (DMTP(O - )═S) and nucleotide (5'- O -methoxyphosphorothioyl-2'-deoxyguanosine (G-P(O - )═S)). ESR investigations show that DMTP(O - )═S reacts with Cl 2 •- to form the σ 2 σ* 1 adduct radical -P-S[Formula: see text]Cl, which subsequently reacts with DMTP(O - )═S to produce [-P-S[Formula: see text]S-P-] - . -P-S[Formula: see text]Cl in G-P(O - )═S undergoes hole transfer to Gua, forming the cation radical (G •+ ) via thermally activated hopping. However, pulse radiolysis measurements show that DMTP(O - )═S forms the thiyl radical (-P-S • ) by one-electron oxidation, which did not produce [-P-S[Formula: see text]S-P-] - . Gua in G-P(O - )═S is oxidized unimolecularly by the -P-S • intermediate in the sub-picosecond range. DFT thermochemical calculations explain the differences in ESR and pulse radiolysis results obtained at different temperatures.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics
- electron transfer
- solar cells
- smoking cessation
- human milk
- blood pressure
- aqueous solution
- estrogen receptor
- circulating tumor
- single molecule
- perovskite solar cells
- cell free
- particulate matter
- low birth weight
- ionic liquid
- hydrogen peroxide
- nitric oxide
- nucleic acid
- preterm infants
- low density lipoprotein
- molecular docking
- solid state