Disclosing the Role of C4-Oxo Substitution in the Photochemistry of DNA and RNA Pyrimidine Monomers: Formation of Photoproducts from the Vibrationally Excited Ground State.
Eva VosSean J HoehnSarah E KrulMaurizio PersicoJesús González-VázquezInés CorralPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2022)
Oxo and amino substituted purines and pyrimidines have been suggested as protonucleobases participating in ancient pre-RNA forms. Considering electromagnetic radiation as a key environmental selection pressure on early Earth, the investigation of the photophysics of modified nucleobases is crucial to determine their viability as nucleobases' ancestors and to understand the factors that rule the photostability of natural nucleobases. In this Letter, we combine femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy and quantum mechanical simulations to reveal the photochemistry of 4-pyrimidinone, a close relative of uracil. Irradiation of 4-pyrimidinone with ultraviolet radiation populates the S 1 (ππ*) state, which decays to the vibrationally excited ground state in a few hundred femtoseconds. Analysis of the postirradiated sample in water reveals the formation of a 6-hydroxy-5H-photohydrate and 3-( N -(iminomethyl)imino)propanoic acid as the primary photoproducts. 3-( N -(Iminomethyl)imino)propanoic acid originates from the hydrolysis of an unstable ketene species generated from the C4-N3 photofragmentation of the pyrimidine core.