Journal
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Volume 104, Issue 24, Pages 9931-9936Publisher
NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0703298104
Keywords
nucleic acid; quantum mechanics; spectroscopy; time-dependent phenomena
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A thorough study of the excited-state properties of the stacked dimers and trimers of 9-methyladenine in B-DNA conformation has been performed in aqueous solution by using time-dependent density functional calculations and the solvent polarizable continuum model, and results were compared with experimental results on polyadenine oligomers. The effect of base stacking on the absorption and emission spectra is fully reproduced by our calculations. Although light absorption leads to a state (SB) delocalized over several nucleobases, excited-state geometry optimization indicates that SB subsequently evolves into a state in which the excitation is localized on a single base. Analysis of the excited-state potential energy surfaces shows that SB can easily decay into the lowest energy excited state, S-CT, which is a dark excimer produced by intermonomer charge transfer between two stacked bases. The subpicosecond features of the time-resolved experiments are interpreted in terms of ultrafast decay from SB. After localization, two easy, radiationless decay channels are indeed open for SB: (1) ground-state recovery, according to the same mechanisms proposed for isolated adenine and/or (ii) decay to S-CT. Our calculations suggest that the slowest part of the excited-state dynamics detected experimentally involves the Scr state.
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