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Quantum Chemical Study of the Electron-Transfer-Catalyzed Splitting of Oxetane and Azetidine Intermediates Proposed in the Photoenzymatic Repair of (6−4) Photoproducts of DNA

Yinsheng WangContribution from the Department of Chemistry, Washington University, One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, Missouri 63130Peter P. GasparContribution from the Department of Chemistry, Washington University, One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, Missouri 63130John‐Stephen TaylorContribution from the Department of Chemistry, Washington University, One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, Missouri 63130
2000en
ABI

Аннотация

Semiempirical AM1 and PM3 calculations were used to study the electron-transfer-catalyzed splitting of oxetanes and azetidines that have been proposed as intermediates in the photoenzymatic repair of the (6−4) photoproducts of dipyrimidine sites in DNA by (6−4) photolyase. The calculations show that the gas-phase splitting of an anion radical to a product complex is more exothermic than that of a cation radical, and that both are more exothermic than the neutral pathway. Low-energy pathways for splitting were found to occur by nonconcerted, two-step mechanisms for both anion and cation radical pathways, but only the anion radicals had lower rate-determining barriers for splitting than did the neutral species. In the anion radical pathway, which is thought to be followed by the enzymatic reaction, cleavage of the C5−O4‘ or C5−N4‘ bond followed by cleavage of the C6−C4‘ bond is more favorable kinetically than cleavage in the reverse order. Though the barrier for cleaving the C5−N4‘ bond first is significantly higher for the radical anion of the azetidine than that for cleaving the C5−O4‘ bond of the oxetane, protonation of the azetidine nitrogen of the radical anion leads to spontaneous cleavage of the C5−N4‘ bond. In the cation radical pathway, cleavage of the C6−C4‘ bond followed by cleavage of the C5−O4‘ or the C5−N4‘ bond is more favorable kinetically than cleavage in the reverse order. We also found that the Dewar valence isomer can be reversed to the (6−4) product by both radical anion and radical cation pathways, though the anionic pathway has a much lower barrier. These calculations are in accord with the observation that the Dewar valence isomer is also reversed to the parent nucleotides by (6−4) photolyase, though much less efficiently than the (6−4) products.

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