Abstract

AbstractA molecular dynamic simulation of cytidine reproduced the dominating 3E‐endo, the so‐called North conformation of the sugar and the anti base orientation with χ = –120°. Taken as starting structures for a geometry optimisation, 13C chemical shifts and 1J coupling constants were calculated by DFT [functional: B3LYP, basis set: 6‐31G(d,p)]. As for the first time no minimal structural model was used, the results can be interpreted without further approximations except solvent dependence which was not included. The influence of the glycosidic torsion angle was studied. The 13C chemical shifts correlated with a North conformation of the sugar independent of the base orientation when using an empirically derived coordinate analysis. However, the 1JCH coupling constants and 13C chemical shifts clearly showed a dependence on the glycosidic torsion which enables the identification of χ. The 1JCH analysis showed that the sugar pucker is not the major determinant for 1JC1′H1′. Instead, the base orientation caused major changes, with a maximal difference of 14 Hz. Additionally, 1JC2′H2′, 1JC3′H3′ and 1JC4′H4′ are differently influenced by the glycosidic torsion which can be exploited for assigning χ. Analysis of electrostatic and steric effects showed that an isolated view is not able to explain all NMR spectroscopic data but gives some useful ideas. A higher charge on C3′ and the 1JC6H6 coupling constants were explained by through‐space effects. Depending on the glycosidic torsion, the base non‐planarity changes substantially. The results clearly show that also for ribonucleotides 13C chemical shifts and 1JCH coupling constants are dependent on the base orientation which was questioned in the past.(© Wiley‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2006)

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