2005 36th Meeting of the Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Tuesday–Saturday, May 17–21, 2005;
Lincoln, Nebraska
Session C1: Interaction of Slow Electrons with Biomolecules
1:30 PM–3:54 PM,
Wednesday, May 18, 2005
Burnham Yates Conference Center
Room: Ballroom I
Chair: Ilya Fabrikant, University of Nebraska
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DAMOP.C1.2
Abstract: C1.00002 : Destruction of uracil and thymine at subexcitation energies
2:06 PM–2:42 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Paul Scheier
(Institut f\"ur Ionenphysik, University Innsbruck)
Free electron attachment to gas phase uracil (U) and thymine (T)
leads
exclusively to the formation of fragment anions. In the electron
energy
range between 1 and 3 eV the attachment cross section of the most
dominant
products (U-H)$^{-}$ and (T-H)$^{-}$ reveals several narrow
resonances [1].
By using partially deuterated T with deuterium connected to all
carbon atoms
it is possible to show that all these resonances originate from the
abstraction of hydrogen from the two nitrogen sites [2]. However,
in DNA the
hydrogen atom where T is connected to the sugar is missing and
the other H
atom is part of a hydrogen bridge to adenine. Attachment cross
sections for
the H abstraction from thymidine and 1-methyl-thymine show a single
asymmetric resonance at about 2 eV and enable us to distinguish
between the
two nitrogen positions. For the formation of H$^{-}$ from U and T
the
attachment cross section shows several resonances in the energy
range
between 5 and 12 eV. Experiments with partly deuterated T show
that the
different peaks in the H$^{-}$ ion yield can unambiguously be
associated to
abstraction from the different molecular sites [3]. The energy
dependence
for H$^{-}$ abstraction from the carbon sites shows a remarkable
resemblance
to the energy dependence of strand breaks observed in plasmid DNA
[4]
suggesting that this reaction may be an important initial step
towards
strand breaks. In collaboration with Sylwia Ptasinska, Stephan
Denifl, Stefan Feil, Manuel Winkler, Barbara Mroz, Michael
Probst, Stefan Matejcik, Department of Plasma Physics,
Bratislava; Eugen Illenberger, Institute of Chemistry, FU-Berlin;
Tilmann M\"ark, and the Center of Molecular Biosciences Innsbruck
Team.
\newline
\newline
[1] S. Denifl et al., J. Phys. Chem. A 108 (2004) 6562
\newline
[2] H. Abdoul-Carime et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 92 (2004) 168103
\newline
[3] S. Ptasi\~nska et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. (2005) in print
\newline
[4] B. Boudaiffa et al., Science 278 (2000) 1658
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DAMOP.C1.2