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Photochemical and Photodynamical Properties of Sulfur‐Substituted Nucleic Acid Bases ,
Author(s) -
Ashwood Brennan,
Pollum Marvin,
CrespoHernández Carlos E.
Publication year - 2018
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.12975
Subject(s) - nucleobase , chemistry , photochemistry , sulfur , ultraviolet , triplet state , nucleic acid , dna , combinatorial chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , biochemistry , materials science , optoelectronics
Sulfur‐substituted nucleobases (a.k.a., thiobases) are among the world's leading prescriptions for chemotherapy and immunosuppression. Long‐term treatment with azathioprine, 6‐mercaptopurine and 6‐thioguanine has been correlated with the photoinduced formation of carcinomas. Establishing an in‐depth understanding of the photochemical properties of these prodrugs may provide a route to overcoming these carcinogenic side effects, or, alternatively, a basis for developing effective compounds for targeted phototherapy. In this review, a broad examination is undertaken, surveying the basic photochemical properties and excited‐state dynamics of sulfur‐substituted analogs of the canonical DNA and RNA nucleobases. A molecular‐level understanding of how sulfur substitution so remarkably perturbs the photochemical properties of the nucleobases is presented by combining experimental results with quantum‐chemical calculations. Structure‐property relationships demonstrate the impact of site‐specific sulfur substitution on the photochemical properties, particularly on the population of the reactive triplet state. The value of fundamental photochemical investigations for driving the development of ultraviolet‐A chemotherapeutics is showcased. The most promising photodynamic agents identified thus far have been investigated in various carcinoma cell lines and shown to decrease cell proliferation upon exposure to ultraviolet‐A radiation. Overarching principles have been elucidated for the impact that sulfur substitution of the carbonyl oxygen has on the photochemical properties of the nucleobases.

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