The room-temperature fluorescence properties of DNA nucleoside and nucleotide aqueous solutions are studied
by steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy. The steady-state fluorescence spectra, although peaking in
the near-UV region, are very broad, extending over the whole visible domain. Quantum yields are found to
be mostly higher and the fluorescence decays faster than those reported in the literature. The fluorescence
spectra of the 2‘-deoxynucleosides are identical to those of the 2‘-deoxynucleotides, with the exception of
2‘-deoxyadenosine, for which a difference in the spectral width is observed. The steady-state absorption and
fluorescence spectra do not show any concentration dependence in the range 5 × 10-6 to 2 × 10-3 M. All
fluorescence decays are complex and cannot be described by monoexponential functions. From the zero-time
fluorescence anisotropies recorded at 330 nm, it is deduced that after excitation at 267 nm the largest
modification in the electronic structure is exhibited by 2‘-deoxyguanosine. In the case of purines, the
fluorescence decays and quantum yields are the same for 2‘-deoxynucleosides and 2‘-deoxynucleotides. In
contrast, for pyrimidines, the fluorescence quantum yields of nucleotides are higher and the fluorescence
decays slower as compared to those of the corresponding nucleosides showing that the phosphate moiety
affects the excited-state relaxation.
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