Abstract Prolonged ultraviolet exposure results in the formation of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) in RNA. Consequently, prebiotic photolesion repair mechanisms should have played an important role in the maintenance of the structural integrity of primitive nucleic acids. 2,6‐Diaminopurine is a prebiotic nucleobase that repairs CPDs with high efficiency when incorporated into polymers. We investigate the electronic deactivation pathways of 2,6‐diaminopurine‐2′‐deoxyribose and 9‐methyl‐2,6‐diaminopurine in acetonitrile and aqueous solution to shed light on the photophysical and excited state properties of the 2,6‐diaminopurine chromophore. Evidence is presented that both are photostable compounds exhibiting similar deactivation mechanisms upon the population of the S1(ππ* La) state at 290 nm. The mechanism involves deactivation through the C2‐ and C6‐reaction coordinates and >99% of the excited state population decays through nonradiative pathways involving two conical intersections with the ground state. The radiative and nonradiative lifetimes are longer in aqueous solution compared to acetonitrile. Whileτ1is similar in both derivatives,τ2is ca. 1.5‐fold longer in 2,6‐diaminopurine‐2′‐deoxyribose due to a more efficient trapping in the S1(ππ* La) minimum. Therefore, 2,6‐diaminopurine could have accumulated in significant quantities during prebiotic times to be incorporated into non‐canonical RNA and play a significant role in its photoprotection.
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Poly(dimethylsiloxane) as a room-temperature solid solvent for photophysics and photochemistry
Medium viscosity strongly affects the dynamics of solvated species and can drastically alter the deactivation pathways of their excited states. This study demonstrates the utility of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) as a room-temperature solid-state medium for optical spectroscopy. As a thermoset elastic polymer, PDMS is transparent in the near ultraviolet, visible, and near infrared spectral regions. It is easy to mould into any shape, forming surfaces with a pronounced smoothness. While PDMS is broadly used for the fabrication of microfluidic devices, it swells in organic solvents, presenting severe limitations for the utility of such devices for applications employing non-aqueous fluids. Nevertheless, this swelling is reversible, which proves immensely beneficial for loading samples into the PDMS solid matrix. Transferring molecular-rotor dyes (used for staining prokaryotic cells and amyloid proteins) from non-viscous solvents into PDMS induces orders-of-magnitude enhancement of their fluorescence quantum yield and excited-state lifetimes, providing mechanistic insights about their deactivation pathways. These findings demonstrate the unexplored potential of PDMS as a solid solvent for optical applications.
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- PAR ID:
- 10492452
- Publisher / Repository:
- Royal Society of Chemistry
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
- ISSN:
- 1463-9076
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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