Issue 30, 2017

Ultrafast dynamics in the DNA building blocks thymidine and thymine initiated by ionizing radiation

Abstract

Understanding how energetic charged particles damage DNA is crucial for improving radiotherapy techniques such as hadron therapy and for the development of new radiosensitizer drugs. In the present study, the damage caused by energetic particles was simulated by measuring the action of extreme ultraviolet (XUV) attosecond pulses on the DNA building blocks thymine and thymidine. This allowed the ultrafast processes triggered by direct ionization to be probed with an optical pulse with a time resolution of a few femtoseconds. By measuring the yields of fragment ions as a function of the delay between the XUV pulse and the probe pulse, a number of transient processes typically lasting 100 femtoseconds or less were observed. These were particularly strong in thymidine which consists of the thymine base attached to a deoxyribose sugar. This dynamics was interpreted as excited states of the cation, formed by the XUV pulse, rapidly decaying via non-adiabatic coupling between electronic states. This provides the first experimental insight into the mechanisms which immediately proceed from the action of ionizing radiation on DNA and provides a basis on which further theoretical and experimental studies can be conducted.

Graphical abstract: Ultrafast dynamics in the DNA building blocks thymidine and thymine initiated by ionizing radiation

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Apr 2017
Accepted
12 Jun 2017
First published
12 Jun 2017

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2017,19, 19815-19821

Ultrafast dynamics in the DNA building blocks thymidine and thymine initiated by ionizing radiation

E. P. Månsson, S. De Camillis, M. C. Castrovilli, M. Galli, M. Nisoli, F. Calegari and J. B. Greenwood, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2017, 19, 19815 DOI: 10.1039/C7CP02803B

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