Abstract

The reactions of OH and eaq- adducts of cytosine, cytidine and deoxycytidine in the presence of Cu(II) ions have been studied by product analysis and pulse radiolysis. The product analysis studies show that the degradation of the base is enhanced in N2O-saturated conditions in the presence of Cu(II) ions and the major radiolytic products are Cu(I), cytosine glycols and 5(6)-hydroxycytosine. It is also interesting to note that the yields of Cu(I) are equivalent to cytosine degradation yields, which suggests that the interaction of the OH adducts with Cu(II) ions restricts the radical recombination reactions (known to be the major physicochemical repair process) which partly regenerate the parent cytosine. The rate constants of the reactions of cytosine OH adducts with Cu(II) ions determined by pulse radiolysis lie between 10(7) and 10(8) dm3 mol-1 s-1. The growth in the transient absorption spectra of cytosine OH adducts in the range 330-400 nm, observed in the presence of copper(II) ions in free and complexed state, suggests formation of copper radical adduct which decays by water insertion at the copper-carbon bond to give glycol as the major product. Such copper radical adduct formation was also observed in the case of cytidine and deoxycytidine. The protonated electron adducts (at the hetero atoms) of cytosine, cytidine and deoxycytidine transfer electrons to the Cu(II) ions with rate constants of 10(8) and 10(9) dm3 mol-1 s-1. Here no adduct formation is observed. The steady-state results show that such electron transfer reactions regenerate the parent molecules themselves. Hence such electron transfer reactions do not contribute to enhanced base degradation in the presence of copper ions.

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