posted on 2007-12-20, 00:00authored byDaniele Varsano, Anna Garbesi, Rosa Di Felice
We present the results of time-dependent density functional theory calculations of the optical absorption
spectra of synthetic nucleobases and of their hydrogen-bonded and stacked base pairs. We focus on size-expanded analogues of the natural nucleobases obtained through the insertion of a benzene ring bonded to
the planar heterocycles (x-bases), according to the protocol designed and realized by the group of Eric Kool
(e.g., see: Gao, J.; Liu, H.; Kool, E.T. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed.2005, 44, 3118, and references therein). We
find that the modifications of the frontier electron orbitals with respect to natural bases, which are induced
by the presence of the aromatic ring, also affect the optical response. In particular, the absorption onset is
pinned by the benzene component of the HOMO of each x-base (xA, xG, xT, xC). In addition, the main trait
of the H-bonding interbase coupling is a conspicuous red shift of spectral peaks in the low-energy range.
Finally, the hypochromicity, a well-known fingerprint of stacking, is more pronounced in stacked xG−C and
xA−T pairs than that in stacked G−C and A−T pairs, an index of enhanced stacking.