Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10547205 Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2005 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Ab initio and density functional theory calculations at the B3-MP2 and CCSD(T)/6-311 + G(3df,2p) levels of theory are reported that address the protonation of adenine in the gas phase, water clusters, and bulk aqueous solution. The calculations point to N-1-protonated adenine (1+) as the thermodynamically most stable cationic tautomer in the gas phase, water clusters, and bulk solution. This strongly indicates that electrospray ionization of adenine solutions produces tautomer 1+ with a specificity calculated as 97-90% in the 298-473 K temperature range. The mechanisms for elimination of hydrogen atoms and ammonia from 1+ have also been studied computationally. Ion 1+ is calculated to undergo fast migrations of protons among positions N-1, C-2, N-3, N-10, N-7, and C-8 that result in an exchange of five hydrogens before loss of a hydrogen atom forming adenine cation radical at 415 kJ mol−1 dissociation threshold energy. The elimination of ammonia is found to be substantially endothermic requiring 376-380 kJ mol−1 at the dissociation threshold and depending on the dissociation pathway. The overall dissociation is slowed by the involvement of ion-molecule complexes along the dissociation pathways. The competing isomerization of 1+ proceeds by a sequence of ring opening, internal rotations, imine flipping, ring closures, and proton migrations to effectively exchange the N-1 and N-10 atoms in 1+, so that either can be eliminated as ammonia. This mechanism explains the previous N-1/N-10 exchange upon collision-induced dissociation of protonated adenine.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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