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PHOTOCHEMISTRY OF DNA CONTAINING IODINATED CYTOSINE*
Authors:R. O. Rahn,&Dagger   R. S. Stafford
Affiliation:Biology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37830, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract— –Irradiation at 313 nm of compounds containing iodinated cytosine moieties results in the photolysis of iodine. Photolysis occurs with a quantum yield of 0·0224·024 for 5-iododeoxycytidine and 5-iododeoxycytidine monophosphate, and 0·004–0·008 for iodinated DNA as well as for iodinated polycytidylate. Photodegradation of the cytosine moiety occurs when air is present during irradiation, presumably due to the reaction of oxygen with the cytosyl radical formed when iodine is lost. This oxygen promoted photodegradation destroys the cytosine chromophore and is complete in the monomers but occurs to only a limited extent in the polymers. In the absence of oxygen or in the presence of ethanol, photodegradation is prevented and the loss of iodine leads exclusively to the formation of the cytosine chromophore. In DNA, the loss of iodine is accompanied by the formation of sugar damage and/or chain breaks. As measured by sedimentation in alkaline sucrose gradients, approximately one break is made for every six iodinqs lost in denatured DNA. The frequency of chain breakage per iodine photolyzed is reduced 2-fold in renatured DNA. Analysis in neutral gradients suggests that half of the breaks observed in alkali are alkali-labile bonds. Both ethanol and cysteamine reduce the number of chain breaks observed in alkali by ˜ 3-fold.
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