Low-Energy (5-20 eV) Electron-Induced Single and Double Strand Breaks in Well-Defined DNA Sequences

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Abstract

Ionizing radiation is used in cancer radiation therapy to effectively damage the DNA of tumors. The main damage is due to generation of highly reactive secondary species such as low-energy electrons (LEEs). The accurate quantification of DNA radiation damage of well-defined DNA target sequences in terms of absolute cross sections for LEE-induced DNA strand breaks is possible by the DNA origami technique; however, to date, it is possible only for DNA single strands. In the present work DNA double strand breaks in the DNA sequence 5′-d(CAC)4/5′-d(GTG)4 are compared with DNA single strand breaks in the oligonucleotides 5′-d(CAC)4 and 5′-d(GTG)4 upon irradiation with LEEs in the energy range from 5 to 20 eV. A maximum of strand break cross section was found around 7 and 10 eV independent of the DNA sequence, indicating that dissociative electron attachment is the underlying mechanism of strand breakage and confirming previous studies using plasmid DNA.

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Ebel, K., & Bald, I. (2022). Low-Energy (5-20 eV) Electron-Induced Single and Double Strand Breaks in Well-Defined DNA Sequences. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 13, 4871–4876. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.2c00684

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