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Dive into the research topics where Rafał Szabla is active.

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Featured researches published by Rafał Szabla.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013

Theoretical studies of the mechanism of 2-aminooxazole formation under prebiotically plausible conditions

Rafał Szabla; Judit E. Šponer; Jiří Šponer; Robert W. Góra

2-Aminooxazole is generally considered to play a central role in the origin of informational polymers. In the current contribution we use density functional calculations to investigate the detailed mechanism of 2-aminooxazole formation from the prebiotic soup according to the scenario suggested by M. W. Powner, B. Gerland and J. D. Sutherland, Nature, 2009, 459, 239-242. Parallel to the phosphate-catalyzed reaction pathway we also describe its water-assisted variant. Our calculations show that phosphate-catalysis is indispensable not only in the cyclization and the subsequent water-elimination steps, as previously suggested, but also in the very first reaction step leading to the formation of the carbinolamine intermediate. In addition, we suggest concurrent reaction channels for the cyclization and water-elimination reaction steps, both involving catalytic phosphate ions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Electron-Driven Proton Transfer Along H2O Wires Enables Photorelaxation of πσ* States in Chromophore–Water Clusters

Rafał Szabla; Jiří Šponer; Robert W. Góra

The fates of photochemically formed πσ* states are one of the central issues in photobiology due to their significant contribution to the photostability of biological matter, formation of hydrated electrons, and the phenomenon of photoacidity. Nevertheless, our understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms in aqueous solution is still incomplete. In this paper, we report on the results of nonadiabatic photodynamics simulations of microhydrated 2-aminooxazole molecule employing algebraic diagrammatic construction to the second order. Our results indicate that electron-driven proton transfer along H2O wires induces the formation of πσ*/S0 state crossing and provides an effective deactivation channel. Because we recently have identified a similar channel for 4-aminoimidazole-5-carbonitrile [Szabla, R.; Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2014, 16, 17617-17626 ], we conclude this mechanism may be quite common to all heterocyclic compounds with low-lying πσ* states.


Scientific Reports | 2016

TiO2-catalyzed synthesis of sugars from formaldehyde in extraterrestrial impacts on the early Earth.

Svatopluk Civiš; Rafał Szabla; Bartłomiej M. Szyja; Daniel Smykowski; Ondřej Ivanek; Antonín Knížek; Petr Kubelík; Jiří Šponer; Martin Ferus; Judit E. Šponer

Recent synthetic efforts aimed at reconstructing the beginning of life on our planet point at the plausibility of scenarios fueled by extraterrestrial energy sources. In the current work we show that beyond nucleobases the sugar components of the first informational polymers can be synthesized in this way. We demonstrate that a laser-induced high-energy chemistry combined with TiO2 catalysis readily produces a mixture of pentoses, among them ribose, arabinose and xylose. This chemistry might be highly relevant to the Late Heavy Bombardment period of Earth’s history about 4–3.85 billion years ago. In addition, we present an in-depth theoretical analysis of the most challenging step of the reaction pathway, i.e., the TiO2-catalyzed dimerization of formaldehyde leading to glycolaldehyde.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Molecular mechanism of diaminomaleonitrile to diaminofumaronitrile photoisomerization: an intermediate step in the prebiotic formation of purine nucleobases.

Rafał Szabla; Robert W. Góra; Jiří Šponer; Judit E. Šponer

The photoinduced isomerization of diaminomaleonitrile (DAMN) to diaminofumaronitrile (DAFN) was suggested to play a key role in the prebiotically plausible formation of purine nucleobases and nucleotides. In this work we analyze two competitive photoisomerization mechanisms on the basis of state-of-the-art quantum-chemical calculations. Even though it was suggested that this process might occur on the triplet potential-energy surface, our results indicate that the singlet reaction channel should not be disregarded either. In fact, the peaked topography of the S1 /S0 conical intersection suggests that the deexcitation should most likely occur on a sub-picosecond timescale and the singlet photoisomerization mechanism might effectively compete even with a very efficient intersystem crossing. Such a scenario is further supported by the relatively small spin-orbit coupling of the S1 and T2 states in the Franck-Condon region, which does not indicate a very effective triplet bypass for this photoreaction. Therefore, we conclude that the triplet reaction channel in DAMN might not be as prominent as was previously thought.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2016

Comparative Assessment of Different RNA Tetranucleotides from the DFT-D3 and Force Field Perspective

Rafał Szabla; Marek Havrila; Holger Kruse; Jiří Šponer

Classical force field (FF) molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of RNA tetranucleotides have substantial problems in reproducing conformer populations indicated by NMR experiments. To provide more information about the possible sources of errors, we performed quantum mechanical (QM, TPSS-D3/def2-TZVP) and molecular mechanics (MM, AMBER parm99bsc0+χOL3) calculations of different r(CCCC), r(GACC), and r(UUUU) conformers obtained from explicit solvent MD simulations. Solvent effects in the static QM and MM calculations were mimicked using implicit solvent models (COSMO and Poisson-Boltzmann, respectively). The comparison of QM and MM geometries and energies revealed that the two methodologies provide qualitatively consistent results in most of the cases. Even though we found some differences, these were insufficient to indicate any systematic corrections of the RNA FF terms that could improve the performance of classical MD in simulating tetranucleotides. On the basis of these findings, we inferred that the overpopulation of intercalated conformers in the MD simulations of RNA tetramers, which were not observed experimentally, might be predominantly caused by imbalanced water-solvent and water-water interactions. Apart from the large-scale QM calculations performed to assess the performance of the AMBER FF, a representative spectrum of faster QM methods was tested.


Nature Chemistry | 2017

A prebiotically plausible synthesis of pyrimidine β-ribonucleosides and their phosphate derivatives involving photoanomerization

Jianfeng Xu; Maria Tsanakopoulou; Christopher J. Magnani; Rafał Szabla; Judit E. Šponer; Jiří Šponer; Robert W. Góra; John D. Sutherland


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

Photochemistry of 2-Aminooxazole, a Hypothetical Prebiotic Precursor of RNA Nucleotides

Rafał Szabla; Deniz Tuna; Robert W. Góra; Jiří Šponer; Andrzej L. Sobolewski; Wolfgang Domcke


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Ultrafast excited-state dynamics of isocytosine

Rafał Szabla; Robert W. Góra; Jiří Šponer


Chemical Science | 2015

Excited-state hydrogen atom abstraction initiates the photochemistry of β-2′-deoxycytidine

Rafał Szabla; Jesús Campos; Judit E. Šponer; Jiří Šponer; Robert W. Góra; John D. Sutherland


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Prebiotic synthesis of nucleic acids and their building blocks at the atomic level – merging models and mechanisms from advanced computations and experiments

Judit E. Šponer; Rafał Szabla; Robert W. Góra; A. Marco Saitta; Fabio Pietrucci; Franz Saija; Ernesto Di Mauro; Raffaele Saladino; Martin Ferus; Svatopluk Civiš; Jiří Šponer

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Jiří Šponer

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Robert W. Góra

Wrocław University of Technology

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Judit E. Šponer

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Martin Ferus

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Svatopluk Civiš

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Thomas F. Miller

California Institute of Technology

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