DNA Photoionization and Alkylation Patterns in the Interior of Guanine Runs

Of the DNA bases, guanine has the smallest ionization potential (IP). The recent combined use of experimental gas-phase photoelectron data and self-consistent field (SCF) and post-SCF descriptions has provided new information about the energetics of guanine ionization at the nucleotide and dinucleot...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 122; no. 51; pp. 12824 - 12834
Main Authors Zhu, Qiqing, LeBreton, Pierre R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 27.12.2000
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Summary:Of the DNA bases, guanine has the smallest ionization potential (IP). The recent combined use of experimental gas-phase photoelectron data and self-consistent field (SCF) and post-SCF descriptions has provided new information about the energetics of guanine ionization at the nucleotide and dinucleotide levels (Fernando, H.; Papadantonakis, G. A.; Kim, N. S.; LeBreton, P. R. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 1998, 95, 5550−5555. Kim, N. S.; Zhu, Q.; LeBreton, P. R. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1999, 121, 11516−11530). The energetic matching of the highest occupied π orbitals and the π interaction which occurs in regions of stacked guanines (G runs) give rise to sequence-specific regions of low IP. This is described by a Koopmans analysis of results from ab initio SCF calculations with 6-31G*, 6-31G, 3-21G, and STO-3G basis sets and with ZINDO semiempirical calculations on oligonucleotides and oligonucleotide models. At the ab initio 3-21G SCF level, model calculations indicate that the lowest IP of guanine in a double-stranded G run containing three guanine−cytosine base pairs is approximately 1 eV smaller than that of free guanine. The ab initio and semiemprirical results indicate that, in double-stranded oligonucleotides containing G runs with three or four guanines, an interior guanine has the lowest IP. This occurs for oligonucleotides in both the A- and B-DNA conformations, and for oligonucleotides with strong phosphate−counterion interactions. The finding that the lowest energy base ionization occurs from the interior of G runs differs from the result reported for a model employing a double-stranded G run without sugar and phosphate groups (Saito, I.; Nakamura, T.; Nakatani, K. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 3001−3006) where the guanine at the 5‘-end has the lowest IP. However, it is consistent with earlier results indicating that, in G runs, the molecular electrostatic potential is more negative around guanines in the interior than around guanines at the ends. The low interior IPs correlate with guanine two-photon ionization patterns. They also correlate with the high reactivities at interior sites exhibited by the electrophilic antitumor agent bis-2-cholroethylmethylamine (nitrogen mustard) and by the potent carcinogen N-methyl-N-nitrosourea.
Bibliography:istex:B24EDD1F41E5FF40ED2858C77358050604EBA6DF
ark:/67375/TPS-KB0K0CKG-C
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja002523c