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N3 Protonation Induces Base Rotation of 2 '-Deoxyadenosine-5 '-monophosphate and Adenosine-5 '-monophosphate

Authors :
Y.-w. Nei
C. C. He
M. T. Rodgers
R. R. Wu
Giel Berden
Jos Oomens
L. A. Hamlow
Source :
Journal of Physical Chemistry B: Condensed Matter, Materials, Surfaces, Interfaces and Biophysical, 120, 20, pp. 4616-4624, Journal of Physical Chemistry B: Condensed Matter, Materials, Surfaces, Interfaces and Biophysical, 120, 4616-4624
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) action spectroscopy experiments combined with theoretical calculations are performed to investigate the stable gas-phase conformations of the protonated adenine mononucleotides, [pdAdo+H](+) and [pAdo+H](+). Conformations that are present in the experiments are elucidated via comparative analyses of the experimental IRMPD spectra and the B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) IR spectra predicted for the conformers optimized at this level of theory. N3 protonation is preferred as it induces base rotation, which allows a strong hydrogen bond to be formed between the excess proton of adenine and the phosphate moiety. In contrast, both N1 and N7 protonation are predicted to be >35 kJ/mol less favorable than N3 protonation. Only N3 protonated conformers are present in the experiments in measurable abundance. Both the low-energy conformers computed and the experimental IRMPD spectra of [pdAdo+H](+) and [pAdo+H](+) indicate that the 2'-hydroxyl moiety does not significantly impact the structure of the most stable conformer or the IRMPD spectral profile of [pAdo+H](+) vs that of [pdAdo+H](+). However, the 2'-hydroxyl leads to a 3-fold enhancement in the IRMPD yield of [pAdo+H](+) in the fingerprint region. Comparison of present results to those reported in a previous IRMPD study of the analogous protonated adenine nucleosides allows the effects of the phosphate moiety on the gas-phase conformations to be elucidated.

Details

ISSN :
15206106
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Physical Chemistry B: Condensed Matter, Materials, Surfaces, Interfaces and Biophysical, 120, 20, pp. 4616-4624, Journal of Physical Chemistry B: Condensed Matter, Materials, Surfaces, Interfaces and Biophysical, 120, 4616-4624
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2ef4f7c1efb53f199f9ce9a335943246
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b04052