Physical properties of 4 room-temperature ionic liquids consisting of the 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium cation with various perfluorinated anions and the bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (Tf2N-) anion with 12 pyrrolidinium-, ammonium-, and hydroxyl-containing cations are reported. Electronic structure methods are used to calculate properties related to the size, shape, and dipole moment of individual ions. Experimental measurements of phase-transition temperatures, densities, refractive indices, surface tensions, solvatochromic polarities based on absorption of Nile Red, 19F chemical shifts of the Tf2N- anion, temperature-dependent viscosities, conductivities, and cation diffusion coefficients are reported. Correlations among the measured quantities as well as the use of surface tension and molar volume for estimating Hildebrand solubility parameters of ionic liquids are also discussed.
Secondary structure plays critical roles in nucleic acid function. Mismatches in DNA can lead to mutation and disease, and some mismatches involve a protonated base. Among protonated mismatches, A(+).C wobble pairs form near physiological pH and have relatively minor effects on helix geometry, making them especially important in biology. Herein, we investigate effects of helix position, temperature, and ionic strength on pK(a) shifting in A(+).C wobble pairs in DNA. We observe that pK(a) shifting is favored by internal A(+).C wobbles, which have low cooperativities of folding and make large contributions to stability, and disfavored by external A(+).C wobbles, which have high folding cooperativities but make small contributions to stability. An inverse relationship between pK(a) shifting and temperature is also found, which supports a model in which protonation is enthalpically favored overall and entropically correlated with cooperativity of folding. We also observe greater pK(a) shifts as the ionic strength decreases, consistent with anticooperativity between proton binding and counterion-condensed monovalent cation. Under the most favorable temperature and ionic strength conditions tested, a pK(a) of 8.0 is observed for the A(+).C wobble pair, which represents an especially large shift ( approximately 4.5 pK(a) units) from the unperturbed pK(a) value of adenosine. This study suggests that protonated A(+).C wobble pairs exist in DNA under biologically relevant conditions, where they can drive conformational changes and affect replication and transcription fidelity.
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