Issue 14, 2003

Excess electron transfer in flavin-capped, thymine dimer-containing DNA hairpins

Abstract

The transfer of an excess electron through DNA was investigated with DNA hairpins, which contain a flavin cap functioning as an electron donor. A thymine dimer with an open backbone acts as the electron acceptor. The dimer translates the electron capture into a strand break, which is readily detectable by HPLC. Analysis of four hairpins, in which the distance between the flavin donor and the dimer acceptor was systematically increased, revealed a flat distance dependence of the repair efficiency supporting the view that excess electrons hop through DNA using intermediate A–T base pairs as temporary charge carriers.

Graphical abstract: Excess electron transfer in flavin-capped, thymine dimer-containing DNA hairpins

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
08 Apr 2003
Accepted
21 May 2003
First published
10 Jun 2003

Chem. Commun., 2003, 1632-1633

Excess electron transfer in flavin-capped, thymine dimer-containing DNA hairpins

C. Behrens and T. Carell, Chem. Commun., 2003, 1632 DOI: 10.1039/B303805J

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