Ultrafast dynamics of a nucleobase analogue illuminated by a short intense x-ray free electron laser pulse

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Abstract

Understanding x-ray radiation damage is a crucial issue for both medical applications of x rays and x-ray free-electron-laser (XFEL) science aimed at molecular imaging. Decrypting the charge and fragmentation dynamics of nucleobases, the smallest units of a macro-biomolecule, contributes to a bottom-up understanding of the damage via cascades of phenomena following x-ray exposure. We investigate experimentally and by numerical simulations the ultrafast radiation damage induced on a nucleobase analogue (5-iodouracil) by an ultrashort (10 fs) high-intensity radiation pulse generated by XFEL at SPring-8 Angstrom Compact free electron Laser (SACLA). The present study elucidates a plausible underlying radiosensitizing mechanism of 5-iodouracil. This mechanism is independent of the exact composition of 5-iodouracil and thus relevant to other such radiosensitizers. Furthermore, we found that despite a rapid increase of the net molecular charge in the presence of iodine, and of the ultrafast release of hydrogen, the other atoms are almost frozen within the 10-fs duration of the exposure. This validates singleshot molecular imaging as a consistent approach, provided the radiation pulse used is brief enough.

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Nagaya, K., Motomura, K., Kukk, E., Fukuzawa, H., Wada, S., Tachibana, T., … Ueda, K. (2016). Ultrafast dynamics of a nucleobase analogue illuminated by a short intense x-ray free electron laser pulse. Physical Review X, 6(2). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.021035

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