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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Roca-Sanjuán is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Roca-Sanjuán.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Computational Molecular Science | 2012

Multiconfiguration second‐order perturbation theory approach to strong electron correlation in chemistry and photochemistry

Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Francesco Aquilante; Roland Lindh

Rooted in the very fundamental aspects of many chemical phenomena, and for the majority of photochemistry, is the onset of strongly interacting electronic configurations. To describe this challenging regime of strong electron correlation, an extraordinary effort has been put forward by a young generation of scientists in the development of theories ‘beyond’ standard wave function and density functional models. Despite their encouraging results, a twenty‐and‐more‐year old approach still stands as the gold standard for these problems: multiconfiguration second‐order perturbation theory based on complete active space reference wave function (CASSCF/CASPT2). We will present here a brief overview of the CASSCF/CASPT2 computational protocol, and of its role in our understanding of chemical and photochemical processes.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Ab initio determination of the ionization potentials of DNA and RNA nucleobases.

Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Mercedes Rubio; Manuela Merchán; Luis Serrano-Andrés

Quantum chemical high level ab initio coupled-cluster and multiconfigurational perturbation methods have been used to compute vertical and adiabatic ionization potentials of the five canonical DNA and RNA nucleobases: uracil, thymine, cytosine, adenine, and guanine. Several states of their cations have been also calculated. The present results represent a systematic compendium of these magnitudes, establishing theoretical reference values at a level not reported before, calibrating computational strategies, and guiding the assignment of the features in the experimental photoelectron spectra.


ChemPhysChem | 2011

The Chemistry of Bioluminescence: An Analysis of Chemical Functionalities

Isabelle Navizet; Ya-Jun Liu; Nicolas Ferré; Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Roland Lindh

Firefly luciferase is one of the most studied bioluminescent systems, both theoretically and experimentally. Herein we review the current understanding of the bioluminescent process from a chemical functionality perspective based on those investigations. Three key components are emphasized: the chemiluminophore, the electron-donating fragment, and how these are affected by the substrate-enzyme interaction. The understanding is based on details of how the peroxide -O-O- bond supports the production of electronically excited products and how the charge-transfer (CT) mechanism, with the aid of an electron-donating group, lowers the activation barrier to support a reaction occurs in living organisms. For the substrate-enzyme complex it is demonstrated that the enzyme can affect the hydrogen-bonding around the CT-controlling group, resulting in a mechanism for color modulation. Finally, we analyse other luciferin-luciferase systems and compare them to the key chemical functionalities of the fragments of the luciferin-luciferase complex with respect to similarities and differences.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Ab initio determination of the electron affinities of DNA and RNA nucleobases.

Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Manuela Merchán; Luis Serrano-Andrés; Mercedes Rubio

High-level quantum-chemical ab initio coupled-cluster and multiconfigurational perturbation methods have been used to compute the vertical and adiabatic electron affinities of the five canonical DNA and RNA nucleobases: uracil, thymine, cytosine, adenine, and guanine. The present results aim for the accurate determination of the intrinsic electron acceptor properties of the isolated nucleic acid bases as described by their electron affinities, establishing an overall set of theoretical reference values at a level not reported before and helping to rule out less reliable theoretical and experimental data and to calibrate theoretical strategies.


Topics in Current Chemistry | 2013

Excitation of Nucleobases from a Computational Perspective I: Reaction Paths

Angelo Giussani; Javier Segarra-Martí; Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Manuela Merchán

The main intrinsic photochemical events in nucleobases can be described on theoretical grounds within the realm of non-adiabatic computational photochemistry. From a static standpoint, the photochemical reaction path approach (PRPA), through the computation of the respective minimum energy path (MEP), can be regarded as the most suitable strategy in order to explore the electronically excited isolated nucleobases. Unfortunately, the PRPA does not appear widely in the studies reported in the last decade. The main ultrafast decay observed experimentally for the gas-phase excited nucleobases is related to the computed barrierless MEPs from the bright excited state connecting the initial Franck-Condon region and a conical intersection involving the ground state. At the highest level of theory currently available (CASPT2//CASPT2), the lowest excited (1)(ππ*) hypersurface for cytosine has a shallow minimum along the MEP deactivation pathway. In any case, the internal conversion processes in all the natural nucleobases are attained by means of interstate crossings, a self-protection mechanism that prevents the occurrence of photoinduced damage of nucleobases by ultraviolet radiation. Many alternative and secondary paths have been proposed in the literature, which ultimately provide a rich and constructive interplay between experimentally and theoretically oriented research.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Peptide Metal–Organic Frameworks for Enantioselective Separation of Chiral Drugs

José Navarro-Sánchez; A. Argente-García; Y. Moliner-Martínez; Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Dmytro Antypov; P. Campíns-Falcó; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; Carlos Martí-Gastaldo

We report the use of a chiral Cu(II) 3D metal-organic framework (MOF) based on the tripeptide Gly-l-His-Gly (GHG) for the enantioselective separation of metamphetamine and ephedrine. Monte Carlo simulations suggest that chiral recognition is linked to preferential binding of one of the enantiomers as a result of either stronger or additional H-bonds with the framework that lead to energetically more stable diastereomeric adducts. Solid-phase extraction of a racemic mixture by using Cu(GHG) as the extractive phase permits isolating >50% of the (+)-ephedrine enantiomer as target compound in only 4 min. To our knowledge, this represents the first example of a MOF capable of separating chiral polar drugs.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Toward the understanding of DNA fluorescence: the singlet excimer of cytosine.

Gloria Olaso-González; Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Luis Serrano-Andrés; Manuela Merchán

By using the multiconfigurational second-order perturbation method CASPT2, including corrections for the basis set superposition error, the lowest-singlet excited state of the face-to-face pi-stacked cytosine homodimer is revealed to be bound by about half an eV, being the source of an emissive feature consistent with the observed redshifted fluorescence.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Photoinduced Formation Mechanism of the Thymine–Thymine (6–4) Adduct

Angelo Giussani; Luis Serrano-Andrés; Manuela Merchán; Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Marco Garavelli

The photoinduced mechanism leading to the formation of the thymine-thymine (6-4) photolesion has been studied by using the CASPT2//CASSCF approach over a dinucleotide model in vacuo. Following light absorption, localization of the excitation on a single thymine leads to fast singlet-triplet crossing that populates the triplet (3)(nπ*) state of thymine. This state, displaying an elongated C(4)═O bond, triggers (6-4) dimer formation by reaction with the C(5)═C(6) double bond of the adjacent thymine, followed by a second intersystem crossing, which acts as a gate between the excited state of the reactant and the ground state of the photoproduct. The requirement of localized excitation on just one thymine, whose main decay channel (by radiationless repopulation of its ground state) is nonphotochemical, can rationalize the experimentally observed low quantum yield of formation for the thymine-thymine (6-4) adduct.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2011

Essential on the Photophysics and Photochemistry of the Indole Chromophore by Using a Totally Unconstrained Theoretical Approach.

Angelo Giussani; Manuela Merchán; Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Roland Lindh

Indole is a chromophore present in many different molecules of biological interest, such as the essential amino acid tryptophan and the neurotransmitter serotonin. On the basis of CASPT2//CASSCF quantum chemical calculations, the photophysical properties of the system after UV irradiation have been studied through the exploration of the potential energy hypersurfaces of the singlet and triplet low-lying valence excited states. In contrast to previous studies, the present work has been carried out without imposing any restriction to the geometry of the molecule (C1 symmetry) and by performing minimum energy path calculations, which is the only instrument able to provide the lowest-energy evolution of the system. Relevant findings to the photophysics of bare indole have been obtained, which compete with the currently accepted mechanism for the energy decay in the molecule. The results show the presence of a conical intersection (CI) between the initially populated (1)(La ππ*) and the (1)(Lb ππ*) state, easily accessible through a barrierless pathway from the Franck-Condon region. At this CI region, part of the population is switched from the bright (1)(La ππ*) state to the (1)(Lb ππ*) state, and the system evolves toward a minimum structure from which the expected fluorescence takes place. The reported low values of the fluorescence quantum yield are explained by means of a new nonradiative mechanism specific for the (1)(Lb ππ*) state, in which the presence of an ethene-like CI between the (Lb ππ*) and ground states is the main feature.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2011

Chemiluminescence and Fluorescence States of a Small Model for Coelenteramide and Cypridina Oxyluciferin: A CASSCF/CASPT2 Study

Daniel Roca-Sanjuán; Mickaël G. Delcey; Isabelle Navizet; Nicolas Ferré; Ya-Jun Liu; Roland Lindh

Fluorescence and chemiluminescence phenomena are often confused in experimental and theoretical studies on the luminescent properties of chemical systems. To establish the patterns that distinguish both processes, the fluorescent and chemiluminescent states of 2-acetamido-3-methylpyrazine, which is a small model of the coelenterazine/coelenteramide and Cypridina luciferin/oxyluciferin bioluminescent systems, were characterized by using the complete active space second-order perturbation (CASPT2) method. Differences in geometries and electronic structures among the states responsible for light emission were found. On the basis of the findings, some recommendations for experimental studies on chemiluminescence are suggested, and more appropriate theoretical approaches are proposed.

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Ya-Jun Liu

Beijing Normal University

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Nicolas Ferré

Aix-Marseille University

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