Login / Signup

Shape Resonances in DNA: Nucleobase Release, Reduction, and Dideoxynucleoside Products Induced by 1.3 to 2.3 eV Electrons.

Bhavini KumariAlaa HuwaidiGabriel RobertPierre CloutierAndrew D BassLéon SancheJ Richard Wagner
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2022)
Understanding the details of DNA damage caused by high-energy particles or photons is complicated by the multitude of reactive species, arising from the ionization and dissociation of H 2 O, DNA, and protein. In this work, oligonucleotides (ODNs) are irradiated with a beam of low-energy electrons of 1.3 to 2.3 eV, which can only induce damage via the decay of shape resonances into various dissociative electron attachment channels. Using LC-MS/MS analysis, the major products are the release of nonmodified nucleobases (NB; Cyt ≫ Thy ∼ Ade > Gua). Additional damage includes 5,6-dihydropyrimidines (dHT > dHU) and eight nucleosides with modified sugar moieties consisting of 2',3'- and 2',5'-dideoxynucleosides (ddG > ddA ∼ ddC > ddT). The distribution of products is remarkably different in a 16-mer ODN compared to that observed previously with thymidylyl-(3'-5')-thymidine. This difference is explained by electron delocalization occurring within a sufficiently long strand, the DEA theory of O'Malley, and recent time-dependent density functional theory calculations.
Keyphrases