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Stable Thanks to Dynamics - DNA Component Resists UV Radiation Complex computer simulations have, for the first time, allowed scientists to examine in detail the processes that help to ensure the stability of DNA when exposed to UV light. The findings, achieved primarily in relation to DNA component 9H-adenine, have been published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS). Moreover, in recognition of the high quality of the work, they have also been posted in the publication's newly established online section JACS Select. The results of the project, which was supported by the Austrian Science Fund FWF, show that an ultrafast, two-step process forms one basis for the photostability of DNA. UV rays don't just tan our skin - they can also "rob" atoms of their electrons, thereby destroying organic compounds. In order to counteract these destructive effects, the DNA component adenine uses an ultrafast process that lasts for less than one trillionth of a second (a picosecond). UV light causes excitation of the electrons in adenine, which in turn causes the electrons initially to reach a higher energy state. They then return to their original state - this happens at breathtaking speed in the case of adenine. During this process, potentially damaging excitation energy is converted into harmless vibrational energy within the molecular skeleton. This protects the DNA against damage. While scientists were previously aware of this process, they had not been able to simulate it due to the extreme complexity involved and had therefore been unable to study it in detail - until now. Simulating a Transition Lischka's team calculated in detail the transition between the individual energy states of the electrons coupled with the movement of the atomic nuclei. Initial data show that this transition is not uniform, but rather a process made up of two steps. The first of these is "ultrashort" and lasts for only 22 femtoseconds (22 quadrillionths of a second). During this first step, the electrons drop from a high energy state (S3) to a lower state (S1). The second step lasts around 20 times longer than the first one, or half a picosecond. After this step, the adenine electrons will have returned to their original low-energy state (S0) - at unimaginable speed. Motion of Electrons and Atomic Nuclei Original publication: "Nonadiabatic Deactivation
of 9H-Adenine: A Comprehensive Picture Based on Mixed Quantum-Classical
Dynamics" M. Barbatti & H. Lischka. J. Am. Chem. So., 2008, 130
(21), 6831-6839, DOI:10.1021/ja800589p Scientific contact Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Editor/publisher Vienna, 23 February 2009
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