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Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil

We present the first study to measure the dissociative photochemistry of 2-thiouracil (2-TU), an important nucleobase analogue with applications in molecular biology and pharmacology. Laser photodissociation spectroscopy is applied to the deprotonated and protonated forms of 2-TU, which are produced...

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Autores principales: Uleanya, Kelechi O., Cercola, Rosaria, Nikolova, Maria, Matthews, Edward, Wong, Natalie G. K., Dessent, Caroline E. H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7397253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32664261
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25143157
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author Uleanya, Kelechi O.
Cercola, Rosaria
Nikolova, Maria
Matthews, Edward
Wong, Natalie G. K.
Dessent, Caroline E. H.
author_facet Uleanya, Kelechi O.
Cercola, Rosaria
Nikolova, Maria
Matthews, Edward
Wong, Natalie G. K.
Dessent, Caroline E. H.
author_sort Uleanya, Kelechi O.
collection PubMed
description We present the first study to measure the dissociative photochemistry of 2-thiouracil (2-TU), an important nucleobase analogue with applications in molecular biology and pharmacology. Laser photodissociation spectroscopy is applied to the deprotonated and protonated forms of 2-TU, which are produced in the gas-phase using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Our results show that the deprotonated form of 2-thiouracil ([2-TU-H](−)) decays predominantly by electron ejection and hence concomitant production of the [2-TU-H]· free-radical species, following photoexcitation across the UVA-UVC region. Thiocyanate (SCN(−)) and a m/z 93 fragment ion are also observed as photodecay products of [2-TU-H](−) but at very low intensities. Photoexcitation of protonated 2-thiouracil ([2-TU·H](+)) across the same UVA-UVC spectral region produces the m/z 96 cationic fragment as the major photofragment. This ion corresponds to ejection of an HS· radical from the precursor ion and is determined to be a product of direct excited state decay. Fragment ions associated with decay of the hot ground state (i.e., the ions we would expect to observe if 2-thiouracil was behaving like UV-dissipating uracil) are observed as much more minor products. This behaviour is consistent with enhanced intersystem crossing to triplet excited states compared to internal conversion back to the ground state. These are the first experiments to probe the effect of protonation/deprotonation on thionucleobase photochemistry, and hence explore the effect of pH at a molecular level on their photophysical properties.
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spelling pubmed-73972532020-08-16 Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil Uleanya, Kelechi O. Cercola, Rosaria Nikolova, Maria Matthews, Edward Wong, Natalie G. K. Dessent, Caroline E. H. Molecules Article We present the first study to measure the dissociative photochemistry of 2-thiouracil (2-TU), an important nucleobase analogue with applications in molecular biology and pharmacology. Laser photodissociation spectroscopy is applied to the deprotonated and protonated forms of 2-TU, which are produced in the gas-phase using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Our results show that the deprotonated form of 2-thiouracil ([2-TU-H](−)) decays predominantly by electron ejection and hence concomitant production of the [2-TU-H]· free-radical species, following photoexcitation across the UVA-UVC region. Thiocyanate (SCN(−)) and a m/z 93 fragment ion are also observed as photodecay products of [2-TU-H](−) but at very low intensities. Photoexcitation of protonated 2-thiouracil ([2-TU·H](+)) across the same UVA-UVC spectral region produces the m/z 96 cationic fragment as the major photofragment. This ion corresponds to ejection of an HS· radical from the precursor ion and is determined to be a product of direct excited state decay. Fragment ions associated with decay of the hot ground state (i.e., the ions we would expect to observe if 2-thiouracil was behaving like UV-dissipating uracil) are observed as much more minor products. This behaviour is consistent with enhanced intersystem crossing to triplet excited states compared to internal conversion back to the ground state. These are the first experiments to probe the effect of protonation/deprotonation on thionucleobase photochemistry, and hence explore the effect of pH at a molecular level on their photophysical properties. MDPI 2020-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7397253/ /pubmed/32664261 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25143157 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Uleanya, Kelechi O.
Cercola, Rosaria
Nikolova, Maria
Matthews, Edward
Wong, Natalie G. K.
Dessent, Caroline E. H.
Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil
title Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil
title_full Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil
title_fullStr Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil
title_full_unstemmed Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil
title_short Observation of Enhanced Dissociative Photochemistry in the Non-Native Nucleobase 2-Thiouracil
title_sort observation of enhanced dissociative photochemistry in the non-native nucleobase 2-thiouracil
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7397253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32664261
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25143157
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