PubReading [133] - Life in the light: nucleic acid photoproperties as a legacy of chemical evolution - A. Beckstead, B. Kohler

PubReading by Mando Mourad

Episode notes

Photophysical investigations of the canonical nucleobases that make up DNA and RNA during the past 15 years have revealed that excited states formed by the absorption of UV radiation decay with subpicosecond lifetimes (i.e., o10􏰁12 s). Ultrashort lifetimes are a general property of absorbing sunscreen molecules, suggesting that the nucleobases are molecular survivors of a harsh UV environment. Encoding the genome using photostable building blocks is an elegant solution to the threat of photochemical damage. Ultrafast excited-state deactivation strongly supports the hypothesis that UV radiation played a major role in shaping molecular inventories on the early Earth before the emergence of life and the subsequent development of a protective ozone shield. Here, we review the general physical and ch ... 

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Keywords
photopropertiesuv radiationnucleobases