40th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 54, Number 7
Tuesday–Saturday, May 19–23, 2009;
Charlottesville, Virginia
Session Q4: Collisions with Biomolecules
8:00 AM–10:00 AM,
Friday, May 22, 2009
Clark Hall
Room: 108
Chair: Murtadha Khakoo, California State University, Fullerton
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.DAMOP.Q4.2
Abstract: Q4.00002 : Effects of low-energy electrons on DNA constituents: effective cross sections for condensed thymidine
8:30 AM–9:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Radmila Panajotovic
(Department of Physics and Astronomy, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK)
Since the first experiments of low-energy electron scattering
from condensed
DNA [1] have been performed, the interest in studying low-energy
electron-biomolecule interactions has been increasing. Knowledge of
effective cross sections for single- and double-strand breaks of
DNA and for
vibrational and electronic excitation of nucleic bases and
nucleosides are
opening the door to better understanding of effects of radiation
on live
tissue and possibly indicating interaction pathways leading to gene
mutations and cancer.
The strong variation of effective cross sections for DNA
single-strand
breaks with incident electron energy and the resonant enhancement
at 1 eV
suggested that considerable damage is inflicted by very
low-energy electrons
to DNA, and indicates the important role of $\pi $* shape
resonances in the
bond-breaking process. However, the complexity of DNA, even if
studied as a
short single-strand chain, imposes a need to perform measurements
on its
isolated constituents, such as nucleic bases and nucleosides.
Thymidine is
one of the most important nucleosides of DNA and an important
component of
antiviral compounds. In the condensed phase, thymidine's
2'-deoxyribose ring
is in the pentose sugar ring form, which is a true conformation
of this
nucleoside in DNA.
Results from High-Resolution Electron Energy Loss [2] study of
monomolecular
films of thymidine will be discussed and the presence of
resonances in the
effective cross sections at incident energy below 5 eV will be
commented as
a possible indication of the dissociative electron attachment. In
addition,
results on the resonance structures in the effective cross
sections for
electronic excitations for the incident electron energy from 1.5
to 12 eV
will be discussed as a possible pathway for strand brakes in DNA.
\\[4pt]
[1] Boudaiffa B, Cloutier P, Hunting D, Huels M A and Sanche L
2002 \textit{Rad. Res}. \textbf{157} 227-234\\[0pt]
[2] Panajotovic R, Martin F, Cloutier P, Hunting, D, and Sanche
L, 2006 \textit{Rad.Res.} \textbf{165} 452-459; Levesque P L,
Michaud M, Sanche L 2003 \textit{Nuc. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. B
}\textbf{208} 225
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.DAMOP.Q4.2