Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5416353 | Journal of Molecular Structure: THEOCHEM | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
This concerns the heat of reaction, ÎHreactâ=ÎHfâ(K·)+ÎHfâ(L·)-ÎHfâ(KL), accompanying the cleavage of deoxyribonucleosides (KL) to give sugar radicals (K·) and (adenine or guanine) base radicals (L·) under the influence of radical cations R+=H+,CH3+ and C2H5+. (The cited ÎHfâ's are the appropriate standard enthalpies of formation at 298.15 K.) Addition of R+ onto one or another nitrogen of the bases does indeed perturb the zero-point + heat-content energies Z, namely, Z(KL)âZ(KLâ²),Z(L·)âZ(L·â²), as well as the “reorganizational energies” Re, i.e., Re(L·)âRe(L·â²). (Re describes how a free radical differs from its hypothetical electroneutral counterpart found in a symmetrical molecule L-L.) Finally, the “Charge Neutralization Energy” CNE describes the energetics accompanying charge transfers between the fragments K and L in the original molecule, linked to one another by the bond with energy εkl(kâK,lâL). It turns out that CNE and Z have little (or no) saying in the decomposition KLâK·+L·. The driving force is clearly in the weakening of εkl under the influence of added R+ cations. The gas-phase Re energies, whose evaluation is reported in detail, would magnify this effect but are unlikely to be of any relevance in in vivo depurinations of DNA molecules.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
Ãdouard C. Vauthier, Sándor Fliszár,