Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.108, No.49, 19013-19019, 2004
Hydrogen atom loss in pyrimidine DNA bases induced by low-energy electrons: Energetics predicted by theory
In addition to inducing DNA strand breaks, low-energy electrons (LEEs) also have been shown to induce fragmentation of pyrimidine bases (uracil, thymine, and cytosine) in the gas and condensed phases. Loss of a hydrogen atom from a DNA base-electron adduct initiates chemical modification of the base, which can cause permanent damage to the base as well as to DNA. Thus, the energetics of hydrogen atom loss reactions from anionic bases is crucial to understanding the mechanism of LEE-induced damage to DNA and its component bases. Following our previous report on LEE interactions with uracil [J. Phys. Chem. B 2004, 108, 5472-5476], in this work we investigate LEE interactions with thymine and cytosine. The adiabatic potential energy surface along each N-H or C-H bond is explored up to 3Angstrom at the DFT level. The changes in energy, enthalpy, and free energy (DeltaE, DeltaH, and DeltaG) for a complete separation of an H atom or a methyl (amino) group from the anionic base as well as bond dissociation energies of neutral bases are calculated at the CBS-Q level. The electron affinities of the DNA base thymine and cytosine and their H-deleted neutral fragments are also calculated. All N-H bonds are more susceptible to LEE-induced fragmentation than C-H bonds, with N-1-H as the most vulnerable site. Since N-1 is the site of the glycosidic bond between the deoxyribose and the base in DNA, the vulnerable nature of this site toward bond rupture suggests that LEEs are likely to induce base release in DNA. Investigations along these lines are under way.