Guanosine monophosphate (GMP) in aqueous solutions has been studied with femtosecond broad-band transient absorption spectroscopy and by quantum-mechanical calculations. The sample was excited at 267 or 287 nm and probed between 270 and 1000 nm with 100 fs resolution, for various pH values between 2 and 7. At pH 2, when the guanine ring is ground-state protonated (GMPH+), we observe isosbestic behavior indicating state-to-state relaxation. The relaxation is biexponential, ?1 ) 0.4 ps, ?2 ) 2.2 ps, and followed by slower internal conversion with ?3 ) 167 ps. For nonprotonated GMP in the pH range 7-4, we find biexponential decay in the region 400-900 nm (?1 ) 0.22 ps, ?2 ) 0.9 ps), whereas, between 270 and 400 nm, the behavior is triexponential with one growing, ?1 ) 0.25 ps, and two decaying, ?2 ) 1.0 ps, ?3 ) 2.5 ps, components. The excited-state evolution is interpreted with the help of quantumchemical calculations, performed at the time-dependent PBE0 level accounting for bulk solvent effects and specific solvation. The computed dynamics involves La and Lb bright excited states, whereas the n0?* and ??* dark excited states play a minor role. Independent of the pH, the photoinduced evolution involves ultrafast LbfLa conversion (?ba , 100 fs) and exhibits the presence of a wide planar plateau on La. For neutral GMP a barrierless path connects this region to a conical intersection (CI) with the ground state, giving an account of the ultrafast decay of this species. For protonated GMPH+ the system evolves into a stable minimum La min characterized by out-of-plane displacement of NH and CH groups, which explains the longer (167 ps) fluorescence lifetime.
Photoinduced Dynamics of Guanosine Monophosphate in Water from Broad-Band Transient Absorption Spectroscopy and Quantum-Chemical Calculations
R Improta;
2009
Abstract
Guanosine monophosphate (GMP) in aqueous solutions has been studied with femtosecond broad-band transient absorption spectroscopy and by quantum-mechanical calculations. The sample was excited at 267 or 287 nm and probed between 270 and 1000 nm with 100 fs resolution, for various pH values between 2 and 7. At pH 2, when the guanine ring is ground-state protonated (GMPH+), we observe isosbestic behavior indicating state-to-state relaxation. The relaxation is biexponential, ?1 ) 0.4 ps, ?2 ) 2.2 ps, and followed by slower internal conversion with ?3 ) 167 ps. For nonprotonated GMP in the pH range 7-4, we find biexponential decay in the region 400-900 nm (?1 ) 0.22 ps, ?2 ) 0.9 ps), whereas, between 270 and 400 nm, the behavior is triexponential with one growing, ?1 ) 0.25 ps, and two decaying, ?2 ) 1.0 ps, ?3 ) 2.5 ps, components. The excited-state evolution is interpreted with the help of quantumchemical calculations, performed at the time-dependent PBE0 level accounting for bulk solvent effects and specific solvation. The computed dynamics involves La and Lb bright excited states, whereas the n0?* and ??* dark excited states play a minor role. Independent of the pH, the photoinduced evolution involves ultrafast LbfLa conversion (?ba , 100 fs) and exhibits the presence of a wide planar plateau on La. For neutral GMP a barrierless path connects this region to a conical intersection (CI) with the ground state, giving an account of the ultrafast decay of this species. For protonated GMPH+ the system evolves into a stable minimum La min characterized by out-of-plane displacement of NH and CH groups, which explains the longer (167 ps) fluorescence lifetime.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.