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Towards the Ionizing Radiation Induced Bond Dissociation Mechanism in Oxygen, Water, Guanine and DNA Fragmentation: A Density Functional Theory Simulation

The radiation-induced damages in bio-molecules are ubiquitous processes in radiotherapy, radio-biology and critical to space-projects. In this study we present a precise quantification of the fragmentation mechanisms of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and the molecules surrounding DNA such as oxygen and water under non-equilibrium conditions using the first-principle calculations based on density functional theory (DFT). Our results reveal the structural stability of DNA-bases and backbone that withstand up to a combined threshold of charge and hydrogen abstraction owing to simultaneous direct and indirect ionization processes. We show the hydrogen contents of the molecules significantly control the stability in the presence of radiation. This study provides comprehensive information on the impact of the direct and indirect induced bond dissociations and DNA damage, and introduces a systematic methodology in fine-tuning of the input parameters necessary for the large-scale Monte Carlo simulations of radio-biological responses and mitigation of detrimental effects of ionizing radiation.

preprint2022arXivOpen access

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