Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.127, No.2, 699-706, 2005
Valence and dipole-bound anions of the most stable tautomers of guanine
Anionic states of guanine, which is the only nucleic acid base of which the anions have not yea, been studied in either photoelectron spectroscopic (PES) or Rydberg electron transfer (RET) experiments. have been characterized for the four most stable tautomers; of neutral guanine using a broad spectrum of electronic structure methods from the density functional theory, with the B3LYP exchange-correlation functional, to the coupled-cluster method, with single, double, and perturbative triple excitations. Both valence and dipole-bound anionic states were addressed. We identified some of the difficulties facing future PES or RET experiments on the anion of guanine. Even it guanine is successfully transferred to the gas phase without thermal decomposition, it is critical to have the canonical amino-oxo (G) and both amino-hydroxy (GH and GHN7H) tautomers in the beam, not only the most stable, a noncanonical, amino-oxo tautomer (GN7H), as the latter does not support an adiabatically bound anionic state. We also suggested a scheme for enrichment of gas-phase guanine with the canonical tautomer, which is not the most stable in the gas phase, but which is of main interest due to its biological relevance. The tautomers G. GN7H, and GHN7H support vertically bound valence anionic states with the CCSD(T) value of vertical detachment energy of +0.58, +0.21, and +0.39 eV, respectively. These anionic states are, however, adiabatically unbound and thus metastable. The vertical electronic stability of these valence anionic states is accompanied by serious "buckling" of the molecular skeleton. The G and GHN7H tautomers support dipole-bound states with the CCSD(T) values of adiabatic electron affinity of 65 and 36 meV. respectively. A contribution from higher-than-second-order correlation terms represents, respectively, 48 and 68% of the total vertical electron detachment energy determined at the CCSD(T) level.