Charge transfer through DNA/DNA duplexes and DNA/RNA hybrids: complex theoretical and experimental studies

Biophys Chem. 2013 Oct-Nov:180-181:127-34. doi: 10.1016/j.bpc.2013.07.009. Epub 2013 Jul 31.

Abstract

Oligonucleotides conduct electric charge via various mechanisms and their characterization and understanding is a very important and complicated task. In this work, experimental (temperature dependent steady state fluorescence spectroscopy, time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy) and theoretical (Density Functional Theory) approaches were combined to study charge transfer processes in short DNA/DNA and RNA/DNA duplexes with virtually equivalent sequences. The experimental results were consistent with the theoretical model - the delocalized nature of HOMO orbitals and holes, base stacking, electronic coupling and conformational flexibility formed the conditions for more effective short distance charge transfer processes in RNA/DNA hybrids. RNA/DNA and DNA/DNA charge transfer properties were strongly connected with temperature affected structural changes of molecular systems - charge transfer could be used as a probe of even tiny changes of molecular structures and settings.

Keywords: Charge transfer in oligonucleotides; Density Functional Theory; Electronic properties of biomolecules; Temperature dependent steady state fluorescence spectroscopy; Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • DNA / chemistry*
  • DNA / metabolism
  • Models, Theoretical*
  • Quantum Theory
  • RNA / chemistry*
  • RNA / metabolism
  • Spectrometry, Fluorescence
  • Temperature

Substances

  • RNA
  • DNA