Abstract
Sulfur-substituted nucleobases are DNA and RNA base derivatives that exhibit extremely efficient photoinduced intersystem crossing (ISC) dynamics into the lowest-energy triplet state. The long-lived and reactive triplet states of sulfur-substituted nucleobases are crucial due to their wide range of potential applications in medicine, structural biology, and the development of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) and other emerging technologies. However, a comprehensive understanding of non-negligible wavelength-dependent changes in the internal conversion (IC) and ISC events is still lacking. Here, we study the underlying mechanism using joint experimental gas-phase time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (TRPES) and theoretical quantum chemistry methods. We combine 2,4-dithiouracil (2,4-DTU) TRPES experimental data with computational analysis of the different photodecay processes, which are induced by increasing excitation energies along the entire linear absorption (LA) ultraviolet (UV) spectrum. Our results show how the double-thionated uracil (U), i.e., 2,4-DTU, appears as a versatile photoactivatable instrument. Multiple decay processes can be initiated with different ISC rates or triplet-state lifetimes that resemble the distinctive behavior of the singly substituted 2- or 4-thiouracil (2-TU or 4-TU). We obtained a clear partition of the LA spectrum based on the dominant photoinduced process. Our work clarifies the reasons behind the wavelength-dependent changes in the IC, ISC, and triplet-state lifetimes in doubly thionated U, becoming a biological system of utmost importance for wavelength-controlled applications. These mechanistic details and photoproperties are transferable to closely related molecular systems such as thionated thymines.
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