ABSTRACT
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed for the adsorption of different isomers of 6-mercaptopurine on the Au(001) surface. All of the configurations of four thione and two thiol isomers were considered. The results show that the thione isomers adsorbed more strongly on the Au(001) surface compared with the thiol ones. In all of the configurations, the calculated binding energy of ma-8 is the largest, in which the S atom of 6-mercaptopurine binds strongly with one Au atom on the monodentate sites and 6-mercaptopurine retains a flat geometry, predominantly with an approximately 30° orientation between the C-S bond and the Au-Au bond of the catalyst. Additionally, the 6-mercaptopurines in ma-2, mb-5, and mc-3 also bind more strongly onto the surface, which show relatively higher stability on the surfaces, indicating a high preference for adsorption. Charge density differences and TDOS analyses for the four configurations also show that the electronic charges are accumulated between Au and S atoms in the Au-S bonds, indicating occurrence of adsorption and chemical-bond formation.
ABSTRACT
Electronic properties of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) play an important role in their interactions with nano-structured materials. In this work, interactions of adenosine monophosphate (AMP), a DNA nucleotide, with metallic and semi-conducting CNTs are studied using the density functional tight binding (DFTB) method. The electronic structure of semi-conducting CNTs was found to be changed as they turned to metallic CNTs in a vacuum upon interaction with the nucleotide while metallic CNTs remain metallic. Specifically, the band gap of semi-conducting CNTs was decreased by 0.79 eV on average while nearly no change was found in the metallic tubes. However, our investigations showed that the presence of explicit water molecules prevents the metallicity change and only small changes in the CNT band gap occur. According to our charge analysis, the average negative charge accumulated on CNTs upon interaction with the AMP was determined to be 0.77 e in a vacuum while it was 0.03 e in solution. Therefore, it is essential to include explicit water molecules in simulating complexes formed by DNA nucleotides and CNTs which were ignored in several past studies performed using quantum mechanical approaches.