Effect of the DNA Polarity on the Relaxation of Its Electronic Excited States.
Vasilis PetropoulosLorenzo UboldiMargherita MaiuriGiulio CerulloLara Martínez FernándezEvangelos BalanikasDimitra MarkovitsiPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2023)
The DNA polarity, i.e ., the order in which nucleobases are connected together via the phosphodiester backbone, is crucial for several biological processes. But, so far, there has not been experimental evidence regarding its effect on the relaxation of DNA electronic excited states. Here we examine this aspect for two dinucleotides containing adenine and guanine: 5'-dApdG-3' and 5'-dGpdA-3' in water. We used two different femtosecond transient absorption setups: one providing high temporal resolution and broad spectral coverage (330-650 nm) between 30 fs and 50 ps, and the other recording decays at selected wavelengths until 1.2 ns. The transient absorption spectra corresponding to the minima in the potential energy surface of the first excited state were computed by quantum chemistry methods. Our results show that the excited charge transfer state in 5'-dGpdA-3' is formed with a ∼75% higher quantum yield and exhibits slower decay (170 ± 10 ps vs 112 ± 12 ps) compared to 5'-dApdG-3'.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- circulating tumor
- energy transfer
- cell free
- molecular dynamics
- cerebral ischemia
- nucleic acid
- electron transfer
- optical coherence tomography
- quantum dots
- brain injury
- circulating tumor cells
- density functional theory
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- human health
- monte carlo
- blood brain barrier
- dual energy
- health insurance