Premium
The Photochemistry of Thymine in Frozen Aqueous Solution: Trimeric and Minor Dimeric Products
Author(s) -
Shetlar Martin D.,
Basus Vladimir J.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
photochemistry and photobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.818
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1751-1097
pISSN - 0031-8655
DOI - 10.1111/php.12033
Subject(s) - cyclobutane , trimer , chemistry , thymine , dimer , oxetane , adduct , pyrimidine dimer , aqueous solution , photochemistry , stereochemistry , dna , polymer chemistry , organic chemistry , ring (chemistry) , dna damage , biochemistry
Early work identified three compounds, namely the c,s cyclobutane dimer, the so‐called (6‐4) photoproduct (5‐hydroxy‐6‐4′‐(5‐methylpyrimidin‐2′‐one)‐5,6‐dihydrothymine) and a trimer hydrate, as products formed upon UV irradiation of thymine in frozen aqueous solution. More recent work has shown that an (α‐4) product, namely α‐4′‐(5′‐methylpyrimidine‐2′‐one)‐thymine, is a likely product formed under these reaction conditions. During a thorough reinvestigation of the photochemistry of Thy in ice at −78.5°C, we found that a variety of other products could be detected. In addition to the c,s dimer, the other three known cyclobutane dimers, namely the c,a , t,s and t,a forms, are produced, although in considerably smaller amounts. The so‐called “spore product” of thymine (5,6‐dihydro‐5‐(α‐thyminyl)thymine) is likewise formed. Two other dimers have been identified as minor products; one of these has been determined to be 5‐(thymin‐3‐yl)‐5,6‐dihydrothymine and the other has been tentatively assigned to be a (5‐4) adduct (6‐hydroxy‐5‐4′‐(5‐methylpyrimidin‐2′‐one)‐5,6‐dihydrothymine). Compounds with the behavior expected of true trimeric compounds have been isolated via HPLC and characterized by mass spectrometry and photochemical behavior. One of these materials, putatively containing an oxetane ring, decomposes thermally to a secondary trimeric product that is then converted into the known trimer hydrate.