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How Far Does Energy Migrate in DNA and Cause Damage? Evidence for Long-Range Photodamage to DNA.

Arthur KuhlmannLarissa BihrHans-Achim Wagenknecht
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
A new DNA architecture addresses the question, how far energy migrates in DNA and forms cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) as photodamages causing skin cancer. The 3-methoxyxanthone nucleoside allows site-selective photoenergy injection into DNA. The designated CPD site lacks the phosphodiester bond and can be placed in defined distances. The CPD formation links two oligonucleotides together and allows probing by gel electrophoresis. We obtained a sigmoidal distance dependence with R0 of 25±3 Å. Below R0 , short-range energy migration occurs with high CPD yields and shallow distance dependence, characteristic for a coherent process. 5-methyl-C as epigenetic modification on the 3'-side facilitates CPD formation. Above R0 , long-range incoherent energy migration occurs over 30 A-T pairs (105.4 Å). The evidence of long-range CPD formation is fundamental for our understanding of DNA photodamaging. Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.
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