Abstract

A small chemical modification of the nucleobase structure can significantly enhance the photoactivity of DNA, which may incur DNA damage, thus holding promising applications in photochemotherapy treatment of cancers or pathogens. However, single substitution confers only limited phototoxicity to DNA. Herein, we combine femtosecond and nanosecond time-resolved spectroscopy with high-level ab initio calculations to disentangle the excited-state dynamics of 6-methylthioguanine (me6-TG) under variable wavelength UVA excitation (310-330 nm). We find that double substitution of nucleobases (thionation and methylation) boosts the photoactivity by introducing more reactive channels. Intriguingly, 1nNπ*, rather than 1nSπ*, acts as the doorway state engendering the formation of the long-lived reactive triplet state in me6-TG. The 1nNπ* induces a low spin-orbit coupling of 8.3 cm-1, which increases the intersystem crossing (ISC) time (2.91 ± 0.14 ns). Despite the slowed ISC, the triplet quantum yield (ΦT) still accounts for a large fraction (0.6 ± 0.1), consistent with the potential energy surface that favors excited-state bifurcation to 1nNπ*min (3.36 ± 0.15 ps) rather than 1ππ*min (5.05 ± 0.26 ps), such that the subsequent ISC to triplet via 1nNπ*min constitutes the main relaxation pathway in me6-TG. Although this ΦT is inferior to its single-substituted predecessor 6-thioguanine (6-TG, 0.8 ± 0.2), the effect of thionation in synergy with methylation opens a unique C-S bond cleavage pathway through crossing to a repulsive 1πσ* state, generating thiyl radicals as highly reactive intermediates that may invoke biological damage. This photodissociation channel is extremely difficult for conventional nucleobases. These findings demonstrate the synergistic effects of double functionality substitution in modulating excited-state dynamics and enhancing the photolabile character of DNA nucleobases, providing inspirations for the rational design of advanced photodynamic and photochemotherapy approaches.

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