Ultrafast Deactivation of an Excited Cytosine−Guanine Base Pair in DNA

Multiconfigurational ab initio calculations and QM/MM molecular dynamics simulations of a photoexcited cytosine−guanine base pair in both gas phase and embedded in the DNA provide detailed structural and dynamical insights into the ultrafast radiationless deactivation mechanism. Photon absorption pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2007-05, Vol.129 (21), p.6812-6819
Hauptverfasser: Groenhof, Gerrit, Schäfer, Lars V, Boggio-Pasqua, Martial, Goette, Maik, Grubmüller, Helmut, Robb, Michael A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Multiconfigurational ab initio calculations and QM/MM molecular dynamics simulations of a photoexcited cytosine−guanine base pair in both gas phase and embedded in the DNA provide detailed structural and dynamical insights into the ultrafast radiationless deactivation mechanism. Photon absorption promotes transfer of a proton from the guanine to the cytosine. This proton transfer is followed by an efficient radiationless decay of the excited state via an extended conical intersection seam. The optimization of the conical intersection revealed that it has an unusual topology, in that there is only one degeneracy-lifting coordinate. This is the central mechanistic feature for the decay both in vacuo and in the DNA. Radiationless decay occurs along an extended hyperline nearly parallel to the proton-transfer coordinate, indicating the proton transfer itself is not directly responsible for the deactivation. The seam is displaced from the minimum energy proton-transfer path along a skeletal deformation of the bases. Decay can thus occur anywhere along the single proton-transfer coordinate, accounting for the remarkably short excited-state lifetime of the Watson−Crick base pair. In vacuo, decay occurs after a complete proton transfer, whereas in DNA, decay can also occur much earlier. The origin of this effect lies in the temporal electrostatic stabilization of dipole in the charge-transfer state in DNA.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja069176c