First Principles Calculation of pK_a Values for 5-Substituted Uracils
Abstract
Oxidation of uracil (U) and thymine (5-Me-U) are believed to play a role in genetic instability because of the changes these oxidations cause in the ionization constants (pK_a values), which in turn affects the base pairing and hence coding. However, interpretation of the experimental evidence for the changes of pK_a with substitution at U has been complicated by the presence of two sites (N1 and N3) for ionization. We show that a procedure using first principles quantum mechanics (density functional theory with generalized gradient approximation, B3LYP, in combination with the Poisson−Boltzmann continuum-solvation model) predicts such pK_a values for a series of 5-substituted uracil derivatives in excellent correlation with experiment. In particular, this successfully resolves which cases prefer ionization at N1 and N3. Such first principles predictions of ionization constant should be useful for predicting and interpreting pK_a for other systems.
Additional Information
© 2001 American Chemical Society. Received 17 December 1999. Published online 8 December 2000. Published in print 1 January 2001. This work was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health [HD36385 (W.A.G.), GM 41336 (L.C.W.), and CA 33572 (L.C.W.)]. In addition, the facilities of the MSC are also supported by DOE-ASCI, ARO-MURI, ARO-DURIP, National Science Foundation (CHE-95-22179), Exxon Corp., Dow Chemical, 3M, Beckman Institute, Avery-Dennison, Chevron Corp., Seiko Epson, Asahi Chemical, and BP Amoco.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 79226
- DOI
- 10.1021/jp994432b
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170720-070311835
- NIH
- HD36385
- NIH
- GM41336
- NIH
- CA33572
- Department of Energy (DOE)
- Army Research Office (ARO)
- NSF
- CHE-95-22179
- Exxon Corp.
- Dow Chemical
- 3M
- Caltech Beckman Institute
- Avery-Dennison
- Chevron Corp.
- Seiko-Epson
- Asahi Chemical
- BP Amoco
- Created
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2017-07-20Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-15Created from EPrint's last_modified field