Abstract

In the present letter, we investigate the double proton transfer (DPT) tautomerization process in guanine-cytosine (GC) DNA base pairs. In particular, we study the influence of the biological environment on the mechanism, the kinetics and thermodynamics of such DPT. To this end, we present a molecular dynamics (MD) study in the tight-binding density functional theory framework, and compare the reactivity of the isolated GC dimer with that of the same dimer embedded in a small DNA structure. The impact of nuclear quantum effects (NQEs) is also evaluated using Path Integral based MD. Results show that in the isolated dimer, the DPT occurs via a concerted mechanism, while in the model biological environment, it turns into a stepwise process going through an intermediate structure. One of the water molecules in the vicinity of the proton transfer sites plays an important role as it changes H-bond pattern during the DPT reaction. The inclusion of NQEs has the effect of speeding up the tautomeric-to-canonical reaction, reflecting the destabilization of both the tautomeric and intermediate forms.

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