143 results on '"Jonathan Martens"'
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2. Hydrogen Bonding Shuts Down Tunneling in Hydroxycarbenes: A Gas-Phase Study by Tandem-Mass Spectrometry, Infrared Ion Spectroscopy, and Theory
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Mathias Paul, Thomas Thomulka, Wacharee Harnying, Jörg-Martin Neudörfl, Charlie R. Adams, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, Anthony J. H. M. Meijer, Albrecht Berkessel, and Mathias Schäfer
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 293912.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) 12 p.
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- 2023
3. Characterization of Elusive Reaction Intermediates Using Infrared Ion Spectroscopy: Application to the Experimental Characterization of Glycosyl Cations
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Floor ter Braak, Hidde Elferink, Kas J. Houthuijs, Jos Oomens, Jonathan Martens, and Thomas J. Boltje
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Glycosylation ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Cations ,Solvents ,Oligosaccharides ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry - Abstract
A detailed understanding of the reaction mechanism(s) leading to stereoselective product formation is crucial to understanding and predicting product formation and driving the development of new synthetic methodology. One way to improve our understanding of reaction mechanisms is to characterize the reaction intermediates involved in product formation. Because these intermediates are reactive, they are often unstable and therefore difficult to characterize using experimental techniques. For example, glycosylation reactions are critical steps in the chemical synthesis of oligosaccharides and need to be stereoselective to provide the desired α- or β-diastereomer. It remains challenging to predict and control the stereochemical outcome of glycosylation reactions, and their reaction mechanisms remain a hotly debated topic. In most cases, glycosylation reactions take place via reaction mechanisms in the continuum between S
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- 2022
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4. An in silico infrared spectral library of molecular ions for metabolite identification
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Kas J. Houthuijs, Giel Berden, Udo F. H. Engelke, Vasuk Gautam, David S. Wishart, Ron A. Wevers, Jonathan Martens, and Jos Oomens
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Infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS) continues to see increasing use as an analytical tool for small-molecule identification in conjunction with mass spectrometry (MS). The IR spectrum of an m/z selected population of ions constitutes a unique fingerprint that is specific to the molecular structure. However, direct translation of an IR spectrum to a molecular structure remains challenging, as reference libraries of IR spectra of molecular ions largely do not exist. Quantum-chemically computed spectra can reliably be used as reference, but the challenge of selecting the candidate structures remains. Here we introduce an in silico library of vibrational spectra of common MS adducts of over 4500 compounds found in the human metabolome database (HMDB). In total, the library currently contains more than 75 000 spectra computed at the DFT level that can be queried with an experimental IR spectrum. Moreover, we introduce a database of 189 experimental IRIS spectra, which is employed to validate the automated spectral matching routines. This demonstrates that 75% of metabolites in the experimental dataset is correctly identified, based solely on their exact m/z and IRIS spectrum. Additionally, we demonstrate an approach for specifically identifying substructures by performing a search without m/z constraints to find structural analogues. Such an unsupervised search paves the way towards the de novo identification of unknowns that are absent in spectral libraries. We apply the in silico spectral library to identify an unknown in a plasma sample as 3-hydroyxhexanoic acid, highlighting the potential of the method.
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- 2023
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5. Identification of Drug Metabolites with Infrared Ion Spectroscopy – Application to Midazolam in vitro Metabolism**
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Rianne E. van Outersterp, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Arnaud Lubin, Filip Cuyckens, and Jos Oomens
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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6. Identification of Delta-1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate derived biomarkers for hyperprolinemia type II
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Jona Merx, Rianne E. van Outersterp, Udo F. H. Engelke, Veronique Hendriks, Ron A. Wevers, Marleen C. D. G. Huigen, Huub W. A. H. Waterval, Irene M. L. W. Körver-Keularts, Jasmin Mecinović, Floris P. J. T. Rutjes, Jos Oomens, Karlien L. M. Coene, Jonathan Martens, Thomas J. Boltje, MUMC+: DA KG Lab Centraal Lab (9), MUMC+: Academisch Ziekenhuis Maastricht (0), MUMC+: DA KG Lab Specialisten (9), RS: Carim - H02 Cardiomyopathy, and MUMC+: DA CDL Algemeen (9)
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Pyridoxal ,Proline ,Inborn Errors ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Other Research Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 0] ,Metabolic Disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 6] ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,Disorders of movement Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 3] ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Phosphates ,Amino Acid Metabolism ,1-Pyrroline-5-Carboxylate Dehydrogenase ,Proline/metabolism ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,Proline Oxidase ,Pyrroles ,1-Pyrroline-5-Carboxylate Dehydrogenase/deficiency ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Proline Oxidase/genetics ,Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Hyperprolinemia type II (HPII) is an inborn error of metabolism due to genetic variants in ALDH4A1, leading to a deficiency in Δ-1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate (P5C) dehydrogenase. This leads to an accumulation of toxic levels of P5C, an intermediate in proline catabolism. The accumulating P5C spontaneously reacts with, and inactivates, pyridoxal 5’-phosphate, a crucial cofactor for many enzymatic processes, which is thought to be the pathophysiological mechanism for HPII. Here, we describe the use of a combination of LC-QTOF untargeted metabolomics, NMR spectroscopy and infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS) to identify and characterize biomarkers for HPII that result of the spontaneous reaction of P5C with malonic acid and acetoacetic acid. We show that these biomarkers can differentiate between HPI, caused by a deficiency of proline oxidase activity, and HPII. The elucidation of their molecular structures yields insights into the disease pathophysiology of HPII.
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- 2022
7. Characterization of Cyclic N-Acyliminium Ions by Infrared Ion Spectroscopy
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Jona Merx, Kas J. Houthuijs, Hidde Elferink, Eva Witlox, Jasmin Mecinović, Jos Oomens, Jonathan Martens, Thomas J. Boltje, and Floris P. J. T. Rutjes
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Ions ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,heterocycles ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,N-acyliminium ion ,Nitrogen ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared/methods ,Molecular Conformation ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,DFT calculations ,stereoselectivity ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,3. Good health ,0104 chemical sciences ,ion spectroscopy ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Ions/chemistry - Abstract
N- Acyliminium ions are highly reactive intermediates that are important for creating CC-bonds adjacent to nitrogen atoms. Here we report the characterization of cyclic N -acyliminium ions in the gas phase, generated by collision induced dissociation tandem mass spectrometry followed by infrared ion spectroscopy using the FELIX infrared free electron laser. Comparison of the DFT calculated spectra with the experimentally observed IR spectra provided valuable insights in the conformations of the N -acyliminium ions.
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- 2022
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8. Evaluation of table-top lasers for routine infrared ion spectroscopy in the analytical laboratory
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Giel Berden, Rianne E. van Outersterp, Laurent Lamard, Jonathan Martens, Filip Cuyckens, André Peremans, Jos Oomens, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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OPOS ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Materials science ,Infrared ,business.industry ,Free-electron laser ,Mass spectrometry ,Laser ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Ion ,law.invention ,Chemistry ,law ,Electrochemistry ,Environmental Chemistry ,Optoelectronics ,Quadrupole ion trap ,Spectroscopy ,business - Abstract
Infrared ion spectroscopy is increasingly recognized as a method to identify mass spectrometry-detected analytes in many (bio)chemical areas and its integration in analytical laboratories is now on the horizon. Commercially available quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometers are attractive ion spectroscopy platforms but operate at relatively high pressures. This promotes collisional deactivation which directly interferes with the multiple-photon excitation process required for ion spectroscopy. To overcome this, infrared lasers having a high instantaneous power are required and therefore a majority of analytical studies have been performed at infrared free electron laser facilities. Proliferation of the technique to routine use in analytical laboratories requires table-top infrared lasers and optical parametric oscillators (OPOs) are the most suitable candidates, offering both relatively high intensities and reasonable spectral tuning ranges. Here, we explore the potential of a range of commercially available high-power OPOs for ion spectroscopy, comparing systems with repetition rates of 10 Hz, 20 kHz, 80 MHz and a continuous-wave (cw) system. We compare the performance for various molecular ions and show that the kHz and MHz repetition-rate systems outperform cw and 10 Hz systems in photodissociation efficiency and offer several advantages in terms of cost-effectiveness and practical implementation in an analytical laboratory not specialized in laser spectroscopy., Evaluation of four table-top IR lasers for ion spectroscopy in ion trap mass spectrometers shows high rep-rate lasers offer better photodissociation efficiency and are more cost-effective and practical compared to low rep-rate or cw alternatives.
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- 2021
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9. Novel cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers of glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome: Implications beyond the brain's energy deficit
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Tessa M. A. Peters, Jona Merx, Pieter C. Kooijman, Marek Noga, Siebolt de Boer, Loes A. van Gemert, Guido Salden, Udo F. H. Engelke, Dirk J. Lefeber, Rianne E. van Outersterp, Giel Berden, Thomas J. Boltje, Rafael Artuch, Leticia Pías‐Peleteiro, Ángeles García‐Cazorla, Ivo Barić, Beat Thöny, Jos Oomens, Jonathan Martens, Ron A. Wevers, Marcel M. Verbeek, Karlien L. M. Coene, and Michèl A. A. P. Willemsen
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Genetics ,Metabolic Disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 6] ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,Disorders of movement Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 3] ,Genetics (clinical) ,O-glucosylation ,SLC2A1 ,next-generation metabolic screening ,oligosaccharides ,untargeted metabolomics - Abstract
We used next-generation metabolic screening to identify new biomarkers for improved diagnosis and pathophysiological understanding of glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome (GLUT1DS), comparing metabolic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) profiles from 12 patients to those of 116 controls. This confirmed decreased CSF glucose and lactate levels in patients with GLUT1DS and increased glutamine at group level. We identified three novel biomarkers significantly decreased in patients, namely gluconic + galactonic acid, xylose-α1-3- glucose, and xylose-α1-3-xylose-α1-3- glucose, of which the latter two have not previously been identified in body fluids. CSF concentrations of gluconic + galactonic acid may be reduced as these metabolites could serve as alternative substrates for the pentose phosphate pathway. Xylose-α1-3-glucose and xylose-α1-3- xylose-α1-3-glucose may originate from glycosylated proteins ; their decreased levels are hypothetically the consequence of insufficient glucose, one of two substrates for O- glucosylation. Since many proteins are O- glucosylated, this deficiency may affect cellular processes and thus contribute to GLUT1DS pathophysiology. The novel CSF biomarkers have the potential to improve the biochemical diagnosis of GLUT1DS. Our findings imply that brain glucose deficiency in GLUT1DS may cause disruptions at the cellular level that go beyond energy metabolism, underlining the importance of developing treatment strategies that directly target cerebral glucose uptake.
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- 2023
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10. Targeted Small-Molecule Identification Using Heartcutting Liquid Chromatography-Infrared Ion Spectroscopy
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Rianne E. van Outersterp, Jitse Oosterhout, Christoph R. Gebhardt, Giel Berden, Udo F. H. Engelke, Ron A. Wevers, Filip Cuyckens, Jos Oomens, and Jonathan Martens
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,Disorders of movement Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 3] ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 290351.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)
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- 2023
11. A Dynamic Proton Bond: MH+·H2O ⇌ M·H3O+ Interconversion in Loosely Coordinated Environments
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Bruno Martínez-Haya, Juan Ramón Avilés-Moreno, Francisco Gámez, Jonathan Martens, Jos Oomens, Giel Berden, and UAM. Departamento de Química Física Aplicada
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Proton Transport ,Supramolecular complexes ,Mass spectrometry ,Chinese Continental Scientific Drilling Project ,Infrared ion spectroscopy ,General Materials Science ,Química ,Crown ethers ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Molecular Dynamics ,Proton bonding - Abstract
The interaction of organic molecules with oxonium cations within their solvation shell may lead to the emergence of dynamic supramolecular structures with recurrently changing host–guest chemical identity. We illustrate this phenomenon in benchmark proton-bonded complexes of water with polyether macrocyles. Despite the smaller proton affinity of water versus the ether group, water in fact retains the proton in the form of H3O+, with increasing stability as the coordination number increases. Hindrance in many-fold coordination induces dynamic reversible (ether)·H3O+ ⇌ (etherH+)·H2O interconversion. We perform infrared action ion spectroscopy over a broad spectral range to expose the vibrational signatures of the loose proton bonding in these systems. Remarkably, characteristic bands for the two limiting proton bonding configurations are observed in the experimental vibrational spectra, superimposed onto diffuse bands associated with proton delocalization. These features cannot be described by static equilibrium structures but are accurately modeled within the framework of ab initio molecular dynamics., Area of Physical Chemistry
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- 2023
12. Probing radical versus proton migration in the aniline cation with IRMPD spectroscopy
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Laura Finazzi, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, and Jos Oomens
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Biophysics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 292786.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)
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- 2023
13. Competing C-4 and C-5-Acyl Stabilization of Uronic Acid Glycosyl Cations
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Hidde Elferink, Wouter A. Remmerswaal, Kas J. Houthuijs, Oscar Jansen, Thomas Hansen, Anouk M. Rijs, Giel Berden, Jonathan Martens, Jos Oomens, Jeroen D. C. Codée, Thomas J. Boltje, Organic Chemistry, AIMMS, Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, and BioAnalytical Chemistry
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Organic Chemistry ,Carboxylic Acids ,carbohydrates ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,computational chemistry ,Catalysis ,reaction mechanisms ,Uronic Acids ,Isomerism ,IR spectroscopy ,Cations - Abstract
Uronic acids are carbohydrates carrying a terminal carboxylic acid and have a unique reactivity in stereoselective glycosylation reactions. Herein, the competing intramolecular stabilization of uronic acid cations by the C-5 carboxylic acid or the C-4 acetyl group was studied with infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS). IRIS reveals that a mixture of bridged ions is formed, in which the mixture is driven towards the C-1,C-5 dioxolanium ion when the C-5,C-2-relationship is cis, and towards the formation of the C-1,C-4 dioxepanium ion when this relation is trans. Isomer-population analysis and interconversion barrier computations show that the two bridged structures are not in dynamic equilibrium and that their ratio parallels the density functional theory computed stability of the structures. These studies reveal how the intrinsic interplay of the different functional groups influences the formation of the different regioisomeric products.
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- 2022
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14. Identification of drug metabolites with infrared ion spectroscopy – application to midazolam in vitro metabolism
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Rianne van Outersterp, Jonathan Martens, Giel berden, Arnaud Lubin, Filip Cuyckens, and Jos Oomens
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The identification of biotransformation products of drug compounds is a crucial step in drug development. Over the last decades, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) has become the method of choice for metabolite profiling because of its high sensitivity and selectivity. However, determining the full molecular structure of the detected metabolites, including the exact biotransformation site, remains challenging on the basis of MS alone. Here we explore infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS) as a novel MS-based method for the elucidation of metabolic pathways in drug metabolism research. Using the drug midazolam as an example, we identify several biotransformation products directly from an in vitro drug incubation sample. We show that IR spectra of the aglycone MS/MS fragment ions of glucuronide metabolites establish a direct link between detected phase I and phase II metabolites. Moreover, using quantum-chemically computed IR spectra of candidate structures, we are able to assign the exact sites of biotransformation in absence of reference standards. Additionally, we demonstrate the utility of IRIS for structural elucidation by identifying several ring-opened midazolam derivatives formed in an acidic environment.
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- 2022
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15. Breslow Intermediates (Amino Enols) and Their Keto Tautomers: First Gas-Phase Characterization by IR Ion Spectroscopy
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Thomas Thomulka, Katrin Peckelsen, Mathias Paul, Albrecht Berkessel, Anthony J. H. M. Meijer, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, Mathias Schäfer, Jonathan Martens, Jörg-M. Neudörfl, Martin Breugst, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Medicinal chemistry ,Aldehyde ,Catalysis ,Umpolung ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nucleophile ,Breslow intermediate ,Reactivity (chemistry) ,mass spectrometry ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Full Paper ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Full Papers ,umpolung ,Tautomer ,Enol ,0104 chemical sciences ,Breslow Intermediates | Very Important Paper ,chemistry ,IR spectroscopy ,density functional calculations ,Electrophile ,Carbene - Abstract
Breslow intermediates (BIs) are the crucial nucleophilic amino enol intermediates formed from electrophilic aldehydes in the course of N‐heterocyclic carbene (NHC)‐catalyzed umpolung reactions. Both in organocatalytic and enzymatic umpolung, the question whether the Breslow intermediate exists as the nucleophilic enol or in the form of its electrophilic keto tautomer is of utmost importance for its reactivity and function. Herein, the preparation of charge‐tagged Breslow intermediates/keto tautomers derived from three different types of NHCs (imidazolidin‐2‐ylidenes, 1,2,4‐triazolin‐5‐ylidenes, thiazolin‐2‐ylidenes) and aldehydes is reported. An ammonium charge tag is introduced through the aldehyde unit or the NHC. ESI‐MS IR ion spectroscopy allowed the unambiguous conclusion that in the gas phase, the imidazolidin‐2‐ylidene‐derived BI indeed exists as a diamino enol, while both 1,2,4‐triazolin‐5‐ylidenes and thiazolin‐2‐ylidenes give the keto tautomer. This result coincides with the tautomeric states observed for the BIs in solution (NMR) and in the crystalline state (XRD), and is in line with our earlier calculations on the energetics of BI keto–enol equilibria., Breslow intermediates in the gas phase: In N‐heterocyclic carbene (NHC)‐catalyzed Umpolung, the reaction of the substrate aldehyde with the NHC gives the Breslow intermediate (BI) as pivotal species. The combination of IR ion spectroscopy with quantum chemical computations can determine whether the BI exists as a nucleophilic amino enol or as its keto tautomer in the gas phase, which is decisive for its reactivity both in enzymatic catalysis and in organocatalysis.
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- 2021
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16. Isomer-Specific Two-Color Double-Resonance IR2MS3 Ion Spectroscopy Using a Single Laser
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Ruben F. Kranenburg, Giel Berden, Jonathan Martens, Fred A. M. G. van Geenen, Jos Oomens, Arian C. van Asten, HIMS Other Research (FNWI), Supramolecular Separations (HIMS, FNWI), and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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education.field_of_study ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Population ,Analytical chemistry ,Resonance ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Context (language use) ,010402 general chemistry ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,Ion ,law ,Ion trap ,Spectroscopy ,education - Abstract
The capability of an ion trap mass spectrometer to store ions for an arbitrary amount of time allows the use of a single infrared (IR) laser to perform two-color double resonance IR–IR spectroscopic experiments on mass-to-charge (m/z) selected ions. In this single-laser IR2MS3 scheme, one IR laser frequency is used to remove a selected set of isomers from the total trapped ion population and the second IR laser frequency, from the same laser, is used to record the IR spectrum of the remaining precursor ions. This yields isomer-specific vibrational spectra of the m/z-selected ions, which can reveal the structure and identity of the initially co-isolated isomeric species. The use of a single laser greatly reduces the experimental complexity of two-color IR2MS3 and enhances its application in fields employing analytical MS. In this work, we demonstrate the methodology by acquiring single-laser IR2MS3 spectra in a forensic context, identifying two previously unidentified isomeric novel psychoactive substances (NPS) from a sample that was confiscated by the Amsterdam Police.
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- 2021
17. Stabilization of Glucosyl Dioxolenium Ions by 'Dual Participation' of the 2,2-Dimethyl-2-(
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Wouter A, Remmerswaal, Kas J, Houthuijs, Roel, van de Ven, Hidde, Elferink, Thomas, Hansen, Giel, Berden, Herman S, Overkleeft, Gijsbert A, van der Marel, Floris P J T, Rutjes, Dmitri V, Filippov, Thomas J, Boltje, Jonathan, Martens, Jos, Oomens, and Jeroen D C, Codée
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Ions ,Glycosylation ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Stereoisomerism ,Glycosides - Abstract
The stereoselective introduction of glycosidic bonds is of paramount importance to oligosaccharide synthesis. Among the various chemical strategies to steer stereoselectivity, participation by either neighboring or distal acyl groups is used particularly often. Recently, the use of the 2,2-dimethyl-2-(
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- 2022
18. Laboratory IR Spectra of the Ionic Oxidized Fullerenes C
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Julianna, Palotás, Jonathan, Martens, Giel, Berden, and Jos, Oomens
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We present the first experimental vibrational spectra of gaseous oxidized derivatives of C
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- 2022
19. Influence of a Hydroxyl Group on the Deamidation and Dehydration Reactions of Protonated Asparagine-Serine Investigated by Combined Spectroscopic, Guided Ion Beam, and Theoretical Approaches
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Jonathan Martens, Lisanne J. M. Kempkes, P. B. Armentrout, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, Georgia C. Boles, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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Models, Molecular ,Ion beam ,Stereochemistry ,Protonation ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Serine ,Structural Biology ,Group (periodic table) ,medicine ,Dehydration ,Asparagine ,Deamidation ,Spectroscopy ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Water ,Dipeptides ,medicine.disease ,Amides ,0104 chemical sciences ,Thermodynamics ,Protons - Abstract
Deamidation of asparaginyl (Asn) peptides is a spontaneous post-translational modification that plays a significant role in degenerative diseases and other biological processes under physiological conditions. In the gas phase, deamidation of protonated peptides is a major fragmentation channel upon activation by collision-induced dissociation. Here, we present a full description of the deamidation process from protonated asparagine-serine, [AsnSer+H]+, -via infrared (IR) action spectroscopy and threshold collision-induced dissociation (TCID) experiments in combination with theoretical calculations. The IR results demonstrate that deamidation proceeds via bifurcating reaction pathways leading to furanone- and succinimide-type product ion structures, with a population analysis indicating the latter product dominates. Theory demonstrates that nucleophilic attack of the peptidyl amide oxygen onto the Asn side chain leads to furanone formation, whereas nudeophilic attack by the peptidyl amide nitrogen onto the Asn side-chain carbonyl carbon leads to the formation of the succinimide product structure. TCID experiments find that furanone formation has a threshold energy of 145 +/- 12 kJ/mol and succinimide formation occurs with a threshold energy of 131 +/- 12 kJ/mol, consistent with theoretical energies and with the spectroscopic results indicating that succinimide dominates. The results provide information regarding the inductive and steric effects of the Ser side chain on the deamidation process. The other major channel observed in the TCID experiments of [AsnSer+H]+ is dehydration, where a threshold energy of 104 +/- 10 kJ/mol is determined. A complete IR and theoretical analysis of this pathway is also provided. As for deamidation, a bifurcating pathway is found with both dominant oxazoline and minor diketopiperazine products identified. Here, the Ser side chain is directly involved in both pathways.
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- 2021
20. UV/Vis and IRMPD Spectroscopic Analysis of the Absorption Properties of Methylglyoxal Brown Carbon
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Emily Legaard, Lemai Vo, Corey Thrasher, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Aron Jaffe, Rachel E. O’Brien, and Jos Oomens
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Atmospheric Science ,Photodissociation ,Methylglyoxal ,Radiation ,Photochemistry ,Aerosol ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ultraviolet visible spectroscopy ,chemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Infrared multiphoton dissociation ,Photodegradation ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
Brown carbon (BrC) organic molecules absorb solar radiation in the visible range and thus can influence the optical properties of atmospheric aerosol particles and cloud droplets. The absorption pr...
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- 2021
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21. Metabolite Identification Using Infrared Ion Spectroscopy-Novel Biomarkers for Pyridoxine-Dependent Epilepsy
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Clara D.M. van Karnebeek, Marleen C. D. G. Huigen, Albrecht Berkessel, Jonathan Martens, Karlien L.M. Coene, Udo F. H. Engelke, Jasmin Mecinović, Jos Oomens, Thomas J. Boltje, Leo A. J. Kluijtmans, Mathias Paul, Ron A. Wevers, Thomas Thomulka, Jona Merx, Floris P. J. T. Rutjes, Giel Berden, Rianne E. van Outersterp, ANS - Cellular & Molecular Mechanisms, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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Metabolite ,Other Research Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 0] ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,Computational biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,Metabolomics ,medicine ,Humans ,Dried blood ,Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy ,030304 developmental biology ,Pipecolic acid ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,0303 health sciences ,Newborn screening ,Epilepsy ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Infant, Newborn ,Metabolic Disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 6] ,Aldehyde Dehydrogenase ,Disorders of movement Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 3] ,medicine.disease ,0104 chemical sciences ,3. Good health ,chemistry ,Identification (biology) ,IRIS (biosensor) ,Epilepsy/diagnosis ,Biomarkers ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
Untargeted liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS)-based metabolomics strategies are being increasingly applied in metabolite screening for a wide variety of medical conditions. The long-standing "grand challenge" in the utilization of this approach is metabolite identification-confidently determining the chemical structures of m/z-detected unknowns. Here, we use a novel workflow based on the detection of molecular features of interest by high-throughput untargeted LC-MS analysis of patient body fluids combined with targeted molecular identification of those features using infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS), effectively providing diagnostic IR fingerprints for mass-isolated targets. A significant advantage of this approach is that in silico-predicted IR spectra of candidate chemical structures can be used to suggest the molecular structure of unknown features, thus mitigating the need for the synthesis of a broad range of physical reference standards. Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy (PDE-ALDH7A1) is an inborn error of lysine metabolism, resulting from a mutation in the ALDH7A1 gene that leads to an accumulation of toxic levels of alpha-aminoadipic semialdehyde (alpha-AASA), piperideine-6-carboxylate (P6C), and pipecolic acid in body fluids. While alpha-AASA and P6C are known biomarkers for PDE in urine, their instability makes them poor candidates for diagnostic analysis from blood, which would be required for application in newborn screening protocols. Here, we use combined untargeted metabolomics-IRIS to identify several new biomarkers for PDE-ALDH7A1 that can be used for diagnostic analysis in urine, plasma, and cerebrospinal fluids and that are compatible with analysis in dried blood spots for newborn screening. The identification of these novel metabolites has directly provided novel insights into the pathophysiology of PDE-ALDH7A1.
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- 2021
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22. Mechanistic Study of Pd/NHC‐Catalyzed Sonogashira Reaction: Discovery of NHC‐Ethynyl Coupling Process
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Dmitry B. Eremin, Alexander Yu. Kostyukovich, Jana Roithová, Valentine P. Ananikov, Mariarosa Anania, Ekaterina A. Denisova, Daniil A. Boiko, Jos Oomens, Julia V. Burykina, Giel Berden, and Jonathan Martens
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Collision-induced dissociation ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Sonogashira coupling ,Alkyne ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Bond-dissociation energy ,Catalysis ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Molecular dynamics ,Computational chemistry ,Spectroscopy and Catalysis ,Infrared multiphoton dissociation - Abstract
The product of a revealed transformation-NHC-ethynyl coupling-was observed as a catalyst transformation pathway in the Sonogashira cross-coupling, catalyzed by Pd/NHC complexes. The 2-ethynylated azolium salt was isolated in individual form and fully characterized, including X-ray analysis. A number of possible intermediates of this transformation with common formulae (NHC)n Pd(C2 Ph) (n=1,2) were observed and subjected to collision-induced dissociation (CID) and infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) experiments to elucidate their structure. Measured bond dissociation energies (BDEs) and IRMPD spectra were in an excellent agreement with quantum calculations for coupling product π-complexes with Pd0 . Molecular dynamics simulations confirmed the observed multiple CID fragmentation pathways. An unconventional methodology to study catalyst evolution suggests the reported transformation to be considered in the development of new catalytic systems for alkyne functionalization reactions.
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- 2020
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23. Vibrational Spectra of the Ruthenium–Tris-Bipyridine Dication and Its Reduced Form in Vacuo
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Jonathan Martens, Musleh Uddin Munshi, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,010304 chemical physics ,Chemistry ,Infrared spectroscopy ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,0104 chemical sciences ,Dication ,Ion ,Delocalized electron ,Bipyridine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Radical ion ,0103 physical sciences ,Physical chemistry ,Density functional theory ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Quadrupole ion trap - Abstract
Experimental IR spectra in the 500-1850 cm-1 fingerprint frequency range are presented for the isolated, gaseous redox pair ions [Ru(bpy)3]2+, and [Ru(bpy)3]+, where bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine. Spectra are obtained using the FELIX free-electron laser and a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. The 2+ complex is generated by electrospray ionization and the charge-reduced radical cation is produced by gas-phase one-electron reduction in an ion-ion reaction with the fluoranthene radical anion. Experimental spectra are compared against computed spectra predicted by density functional theory (DFT) using different levels of theory. For the closed-shell [Ru(bpy)3]2+ ion, the match between experimental and computed IR spectra is very good; however, this is not the case for the charge-reduced [Ru(bpy)3]+ ion, which demands additional theoretical investigation. When using the hybrid B3LYP functional, we observe that better agreement with experiment is obtained upon reduction of the Hartree-Fock exact-exchange contribution from 204 calculations using the M06 functional appear to be promising in terms of the prediction of IR spectra; however, it is unclear if the correct electronic structure is obtained. The M06 and B3LYP functionals indicate that the added electron in [Ru(bpy)3)]+ is delocalized over the three bpy ligands, while the long-range corrected LC-BLYP and the CAM-B3LYP functionals show it to be more localized on a single bpy ligand. Although these latter levels of theory fail to reproduce the experimentally observed IR frequencies, one may argue that the unusually large bandwidths observed in the spectrum are due to the fluxional character of a complex with the added electron not symmetrically distributed over the ligands. The experimental IR spectra presented here can serve as benchmark for further theoretical investigations.
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- 2020
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24. Novel CSF biomarkers of GLUT1 deficiency syndrome: implications beyond the brain’s energy deficit
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Tessa M.A. Peters, Jona Merx, Pieter C. Kooijman, Marek Noga, Siebolt de Boer, Loes A. van Gemert, Guido Salden, Udo F.H. Engelke, Dirk J. Lefeber, Rianne E. van Outersterp, Giel Berden, Thomas J. Boltje, Rafael Artuch, Leticia Pías, Ángeles García-Cazorla, Ivo Barić, Beat Thöny, Jos Oomens, Jonathan Martens, Ron A. Wevers, Marcel M. Verbeek, Karlien L.M. Coene, and Michèl A.A.P. Willemsen
- Abstract
We used next-generation metabolic screening to identify new biomarkers for improved diagnosis and pathophysiological understanding of glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome (GLUT1DS), comparing metabolic CSF profiles from 11 patients to those of 116 controls. This confirmed decreased CSF glucose and lactate levels in patients with GLUT1DS and increased glutamine at group level. We identified three novel biomarkers significantly decreased in patients, namely gluconic + galactonic acid, xylose-α1-3-glucose and xylose-α1-3-xylose-α1-3-glucose, of which the latter two have not previously been identified in body fluids. CSF concentrations of gluconic + galactonic acid may be reduced as these metabolites could serve as alternative substrates for the pentose phosphate pathway. Xylose-α1-3-glucose and xylose-α1-3-xylose-α1-3-glucose may originate from O-glycosylated proteins; their decreased levels are hypothetically the consequence of insufficient glucose, one of two substrates for O-glucosylation. Since many proteins are O-glucosylated, this deficiency may affect cellular processes and thus contribute to GLUT1DS pathophysiology. The novel CSF biomarkers have the potential to improve the biochemical diagnosis of GLUT1DS. Our findings imply that brain glucose deficiency in GLUT1DS may cause disruptions at the cellular level that go beyond energy metabolism, underlining the importance of developing treatment strategies that directly target cerebral glucose uptake.
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- 2022
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25. Unidirectional Double- and Triple-Hydrogen Rearrangement Reactions Probed by Infrared Ion Spectroscopy
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Dennis Zeh, Marcel Bast, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, Sandra Brünken, Stephan Schlemmer, Mathias Schäfer, and Dietmar Kuck
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Structural Biology ,FELIX Infrared and Terahertz Spectroscopy ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Unidirectional double-hydrogen (2H) and triple-hydrogen (3H) rearrangement reactions occur upon electron-ionization-induced fragmentation of trans-2-(4-N,N-dimethylaminobenzyl)-1-indanol (1), trans-2-(4-methoxybenzyl)-1-indanol (2), 4-(4-N,N-dimethylaminophenyl)-2-butanol (3), and related compounds, as reported some 35 years ago (Kuck, D.; Filges, U. Org. Mass Spectrom. 1988, 23, 643-653). These unusual intramolecular redox processes were found to dominate the mass spectra of long-lived, metastable ions. The present report provides independent evidence for the structures of the product ions formed by the 2H and 3H rearrangement in an ion trap instrument. The radical cations 1+ and 3+ as well as ionized 1-(4-N,N-dimethylaminophenyl)-5-(4-methoxyphenyl)-3-pentanol, 5+, were generated by electrospray ionization from anhydrous acetonitrile solutions. The 2H and 3H fragment ions were obtained by collision-induced dissociation and characterized by IR ion spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. Comparison of the experimental and calculated infrared ion spectra enabled the identification of the 2H rearrangement product ion, C9H14N+ (m/z 136), as an N,N-dimethyl-para-toluidinium ion bearing the extra proton ortho to the amino group, a tautomer which was calculated to be 31 kJ/mol less stable than the corresponding N-protonated form. The 3H rearrangement product ion, C8H13N+ (m/z 123), formerly assumed to be a distonic ammonium ion bearing a cyclohexadienyl radical, was now identified as a conventional radical cation, ionized N,N-dimethyl-2,3-dihydro-para-toluidine. Thus, the 3H rearrangement represents an intramolecular transfer hydrogenation between a secondary alcohol and an ionized aromatic ring. Based on these structural assignments, more detailed mechanisms for the unidirectional 2H and 3H rearrangement reactions are proposed.
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- 2022
26. Laboratory IR Spectra of the Ionic Oxidized Fullerenes C60O+ and C60OH+
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Julianna Palotás, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry - Abstract
We present the first experimental vibrational spectra of gaseous oxidized derivatives of C60 in protonated and radical cation forms, obtained through infrared multiple-photon dissociation spectroscopy using the FELIX free-electron laser. Neutral C60O has two nearly iso-energetic isomers: the epoxide isomer in which the O atom bridges a CC bond that connects two six-membered rings and the annulene isomer in which the O atom inserts into a CC bond connecting a five- and a six-membered ring. To determine the isomer formed for C60O+ in our experiment a question that cannot be confidently answered on the basis of the DFT-computed stabilities alone we compare our experimental IR spectra to vibrational spectra predicted by DFT calculations. We conclude that the annulene-like isomer is formed in our experiment. For C60OH+, a strong OH stretch vibration observed in the 3 μm range of the spectrum immediately reveals its structure as C60 with a hydroxyl group attached, which is further confirmed by the spectrum in the 400-1600 cm-1 range. We compare the experimental spectra of C60O+ and C60OH+ to the astronomical IR emission spectrum of a fullerene-rich planetary nebula and discuss their astrophysical relevance.
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- 2022
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27. Stabilization of Glucosyl Dioxolenium Ions by 'Dual Participation' of the 2,2-Dimethyl-2-(ortho-nitrophenyl)acetyl (DMNPA) Protection Group for 1,2-cis-Glucosylation
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Wouter A. Remmerswaal, Kas J. Houthuijs, Roel van de Ven, Hidde Elferink, Thomas Hansen, Giel Berden, Herman S. Overkleeft, Gijsbert A. van der Marel, Floris P. J. T. Rutjes, Dmitri V. Filippov, Thomas J. Boltje, Jonathan Martens, Jos Oomens, Jeroen D. C. Codée, and Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Organic Chemistry ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,Theoretical Chemistry - Abstract
The stereoselective introduction of glycosidic bonds is of paramount importance to oligosaccharide synthesis. Among the various chemical strategies to steer stereoselectivity, participation by either neighboring or distal acyl groups is used particularly often. Recently, the use of the 2,2-dimethyl-2-(ortho-nitrophenyl)acetyl (DMNPA) protection group was shown to offer enhanced stereoselective steering compared to other acyl groups. Here, we investigate the origin of the stereoselectivity induced by the DMNPA group through systematic glycosylation reactions and infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS) combined with techniques such as isotopic labeling of the anomeric center and isomer population analysis. Our study indicates that the origin of the DMNPA stereoselectivity does not lie in the direct participation of the nitro moiety but in the formation of a dioxolenium ion that is strongly stabilized by the nitro group.
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- 2022
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28. IRMPD Spectroscopy of [PC (4:0/4:0) + M]
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Simon, Becher, Giel, Berden, Jonathan, Martens, Jos, Oomens, and Sven, Heiles
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Glycerophospholipids (GPs) are highly abundant in eukaryotic cells and take part in numerous fundamental physiological processes such as molecular signaling. The GP composition of samples is often analyzed using mass spectrometry (MS), but identification of some structural features, for example, differentiation of stereospecific numbering (
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- 2021
29. Untargeted metabolomics and infrared ion spectroscopy identify biomarkers for pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy
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Ron A. Wevers, Levinus A. Bok, Erik de Vrieze, Thomas J. Boltje, Laura A. Tseng, Saadet Mercimek-Andrews, Tessa M.A. Peters, Keith Hyland, Marleen C. D. G. Huigen, Giel Berden, Clara D.M. van Karnebeek, Hilal H. Al-Shekaili, Floris P.J.T. Rutjes, Arno van Rooij, Sidney M. Gospe, Fred A. M. G. van Geenen, Sanne Broekman, Jasmin Mecinović, Jona Merx, Eduard A. Struys, Michèl A.A.P. Willemsen, Jos Oomens, Erwin van Wijk, Leo A.J. Kluijtmans, Laura A. Jansen, Udo Engelke, Purva Kulkarni, Jonathan Martens, Blair R. Leavitt, Rianne E. van Outersterp, Karlien L.M. Coene, Laboratory Medicine, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Cellular & Molecular Mechanisms, Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Graduate School, Paediatrics, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Compulsivity, Impulsivity & Attention, and Paediatric Metabolic Diseases
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Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Cancer development and immune defence Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 2] ,Other Research Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 0] ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,Bioinformatics ,Sensory disorders Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 12] ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Metabolomics ,Medicine ,Child ,Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy ,Zebrafish ,030304 developmental biology ,Mice, Knockout ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,0303 health sciences ,Newborn screening ,business.industry ,Catabolism ,Neurotoxicity ,Metabolic Disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 6] ,General Medicine ,Aldehyde Dehydrogenase ,Disorders of movement Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 3] ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Untargeted metabolomics ,Pipecolic Acids ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Organismal Animal Physiology ,Clinical Medicine ,Ketosis ,business ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 237516.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) BackgroundPyridoxine-dependent epilepsy (PDE-ALDH7A1) is an inborn error of lysine catabolism that presents with refractory epilepsy in newborns. Biallelic ALDH7A1 variants lead to deficiency of α-aminoadipic semialdehyde dehydrogenase/antiquitin, resulting in accumulation of piperideine-6-carboxylate (P6C), and secondary deficiency of the important cofactor pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (PLP, active vitamin B6) through its complexation with P6C. Vitamin B6 supplementation resolves epilepsy in patients, but intellectual disability may still develop. Early diagnosis and treatment, preferably based on newborn screening, could optimize long-term clinical outcome. However, no suitable PDE-ALDH7A1 newborn screening biomarkers are currently available.MethodsWe combined the innovative analytical methods untargeted metabolomics and infrared ion spectroscopy to discover and identify biomarkers in plasma that would allow for PDE-ALDH7A1 diagnosis in newborn screening.ResultsWe identified 2S,6S-/2S,6R-oxopropylpiperidine-2-carboxylic acid (2-OPP) as a PDE-ALDH7A1 biomarker, and confirmed 6-oxopiperidine-2-carboxylic acid (6-oxoPIP) as a biomarker. The suitability of 2-OPP as a potential PDE-ALDH7A1 newborn screening biomarker in dried bloodspots was shown. Additionally, we found that 2-OPP accumulates in brain tissue of patients and Aldh7a1-knockout mice, and induced epilepsy-like behavior in a zebrafish model system.ConclusionThis study has opened the way to newborn screening for PDE-ALDH7A1. We speculate that 2-OPP may contribute to ongoing neurotoxicity, also in treated PDE-ALDH7A1 patients. As 2-OPP formation appears to increase upon ketosis, we emphasize the importance of avoiding catabolism in PDE-ALDH7A1 patients.FundingSociety for Inborn Errors of Metabolism for Netherlands and Belgium (ESN), United for Metabolic Diseases (UMD), Stofwisselkracht, Radboud University, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Dutch Research Council (NWO), and the European Research Council (ERC).
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- 2021
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30. Mass spectrometry-based identification of ortho-, meta- and para-isomers using infrared ion spectroscopy
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Rianne E. van Outersterp, Jos Oomens, Filip Cuyckens, Giel Berden, Valerie Koppen, and Jonathan Martens
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Chemistry ,Infrared ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Infrared spectroscopy ,010402 general chemistry ,Ring (chemistry) ,Mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Ion ,Computational chemistry ,Electrochemistry ,Structural isomer ,Environmental Chemistry ,IRIS (biosensor) ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Distinguishing positional isomers, such as compounds having different substitution patterns on an aromatic ring, presents a significant challenge for mass spectrometric analyses and is a frequently encountered difficulty in, for example, drug metabolism research. Here, we demonstrate infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS) as a promising new mass spectrometry-based technique that easily differentiates between positional isomers of disubstituted phenyl-containing compounds. By analyzing different substitution patterns over several sets of isomeric compounds, we show that IRIS produces a highly consistent and distinct pattern of IR bands, especially in the range between 650 and 900 cm-1, that are mostly independent of the specific chemical functionality contained in the substituent group. These patterns are accurately predicted by quantum-chemically computed IR spectra and correspond well with tabulated IR group-frequencies known from conventional absorption spectroscopy. Therefore, we foresee that this method will be generally applicable to disubstituted phenyl-containing compounds and that direct interpretation of experimental IRIS spectra in terms of ortho-, meta- or para-substitution is possible, even without comparison to experimental or computationally predicted reference spectra. Strategies for the analysis of larger compounds having more congested IR spectra as well as of compounds having low (electrospray) ionization efficiencies are presented in order to demonstrate the broad applicability of this methodology.
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- 2020
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31. Characterization of holmium(<scp>iii</scp>)-acetylacetonate complexes derived from therapeutic microspheres by infrared ion spectroscopy
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Kas J. Houthuijs, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Alexandra Arranja, J. Frank W. Nijsen, Jos Oomens, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,010405 organic chemistry ,Ligand ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Ionic bonding ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Coordination complex ,Tumours of the digestive tract Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 14] ,chemistry ,Physical chemistry ,Chelation ,Density functional theory ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Spectroscopy ,Coordination geometry - Abstract
Microspheres containing radioactive 166holmium-acetylacetonate are employed in emerging radionuclide therapies for the treatment of malignancies. At the molecular level, details on the coordination geometries of the Ho complexes are however elusive. Infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS) was used to characterize several 165Ho-acetylacetonate complexes derived from non-radioactive microspheres. The coordination geometry of four distinct ionic complexes were fully assigned by comparison of their measured IR spectra with spectra calculated at the density functional theory (DFT) level. The coordination of each acetylacetonate ligand is dependent on the presence of other ligands, revealing an asymmetric chelation motif in some of the complexes. A fifth, previously unknown constituent of the microspheres was identified as a coordination complex containing an acetic acid ligand. These results pave the way for IRIS-based identification of microsphere constituents upon neutron activation of the metal center.
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- 2020
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32. Reference-standard free metabolite identification using infrared ion spectroscopy
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Leo A. J. Kluijtmans, Karlien L.M. Coene, Giel Berden, Jonathan Martens, Udo F. H. Engelke, Jos Oomens, Kas J. Houthuijs, Ron A. Wevers, Rianne E. van Outersterp, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Infrared ,Chemistry ,Metabolite ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Other Research Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 0] ,Disorders of movement Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 3] ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Mass spectrometry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Ion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,Molecule ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Spectroscopy ,Biological system ,Instrumentation - Abstract
Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) is, due to its high sensitivity and selectivity, currently the method of choice in (bio)analytical studies involving the (comprehensive) profiling of metabolites in body fluids. However, as closely related isomers are often hard to distinguish on the basis of LC-MS(MS) and identification is often dependent on the availability of reference standards, the identification of the chemical structures of detected mass spectral features remains the primary limitation. Infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS) aids identification of MS-detected ions by providing an infrared (IR) spectrum containing structural information for a detected MS-feature. Moreover, IR spectra can be routinely and reliably predicted for many types of molecular structures using quantum-chemical calculations, potentially avoiding the need for reference standards. In this work, we demonstrate a workflow for reference-free metabolite identification that combines experiments based on high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC), MS and IRIS with quantum-chemical calculations that efficiently generate IR spectra and give the potential to enable reference-standard free metabolite identification. Additionally, a scoring procedure is employed which shows the potential for automated structure assignment of unknowns. Via a simple, illustrative example where we identify lysine in the plasma of a hyperlysinemia patient, we show that this approach allows the efficient assignment of a database-derived molecular structure to an unknown.
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- 2019
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33. Spectroscopic Evidence for Lactam Formation in Terminal Ornithine b2+ and b3+ Fragment Ions
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Jonathan Martens, Vincent Steinmetz, Árpád Somogyi, Jonathan R. Scheerer, Giel Berden, Xiye Wang, Zachary M. Smith, John C. Poutsma, Jos Oomens, and Vicki H. Wysocki
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Protonation ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Oxazolone ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Crystallography ,Fragmentation (mass spectrometry) ,Structural Biology ,Lactam ,Infrared multiphoton dissociation ,Conformational isomerism ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Infrared multiple photon dissociation action spectroscopy was performed on the AlaOrn b(2)(+) and AlaAlaOrn b(3)(+) fragment ions from ornithine-containing tetrapeptides. Infrared spectra were obtained in the fingerprint region (1000 – 2000 cm(−1)) using the infrared free electron lasers at the Centre Laser Infrarouge d’Orsay (CLIO) facility in Orsay, France and the Free Electron Lasers for Infrared eXperiments (FELIX) facility in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. A novel terminal ornithine lactam AO(+) b2(+) structure was synthesized for experimental comparison and spectroscopy confirms that the b2(+) fragment ion from AOAA forms a lactam structure. Comparison of experimental spectra with scaled harmonic frequencies at the B3LYP/6-31+G(d,p) level of theory shows that AO(+) b(2)(+) forms a terminal lactam protonated either on the lactam carbonyl oxygen or the N-terminal nitrogen atom. Several low-lying conformers of these isomers are likely populated following IRMPD dissociation. Similarly, a comparison of the experimental IRMPD spectrum with calculated spectra shows that AAO(+) b(3)(+)-ions also adopt a lactam structure, again with multiple different protonation sites, during fragmentation. This study provides spectroscopic confirmation for the lactam cyclization proposed for the “ornithine effect” and represents an alternative b(n)(+) structure to the oxazolone and diketopiperazine/macrocycle structures most often formed.
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- 2019
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34. The Glycosylation Mechanisms of 6,3‐Uronic Acid Lactones
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Anouk M. Rijs, Oscar Jansen, Jos Oomens, Jeroen P. J. Bruekers, Thomas J. Boltje, Rens A. Mensink, Jonathan Martens, Hidde Elferink, and Wilke W. A. Castelijns
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Glycosylation ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,010405 organic chemistry ,Glycoside ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Uronic acid ,General Medicine ,Polysaccharide ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Membrane ,Stereoselectivity ,Glycosyl ,Physical Organic Chemistry - Abstract
Uronic acids are important constituents of polysaccharides found on the cell membranes of different organisms. To prepare uronic-acid-containing oligosaccharides, uronic acid 6,3-lactones can be employed as they display a fixed conformation and a unique reactivity and stereoselectivity. Herein, we report a highly β-selective and efficient mannosyl donor based on C-4 acetyl mannuronic acid 6,3-lactone donors. The mechanism of glycosylation is established using a combination of techniques, including infrared ion spectroscopy combined with quantum-chemical calculations and variable-temperature nuclear magnetic resonance (VT NMR) spectroscopy. The role of these intermediates in glycosylation is assayed by varying the activation protocol and acceptor nucleophilicity. The observed trends are analogous to the well-studied 4,6-benzylidene glycosides and may be used to guide the development of next-generation stereoselective glycosyl donors.
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- 2019
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35. Isotope labeling and infrared multiple-photon photodissociation investigation of product ions generated by dissociation of [ZnNO3(CH3OH2]+: Conversion of methanol to formaldehyde
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John K. Gibson, Michael J. Van Stipdonk, Jos Oomens, Evan Perez, Giel Berden, Jonathan Martens, Theodore A. Corcovilos, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,010405 organic chemistry ,Infrared ,Electrospray ionization ,Photodissociation ,Formaldehyde ,General Medicine ,010402 general chemistry ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,Photochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Ion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Methanol ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Electrospray ionization was used to generate species such as [ZnNO3(CH3OH)2]+ from Zn(NO3)2•XH2O dissolved in a mixture of CH3OH and H2O. Collision-induced dissociation of [ZnNO3(CH3OH)2]+ causes elimination of CH3OH to form [ZnNO3(CH3OH)]+. Subsequent collision-induced dissociation of [ZnNO3(CH3OH)]+ causes elimination of 47 mass units (u), consistent with ejection of HNO2. The neutral loss shifts to 48 u for collision-induced dissociation of [ZnNO3(CD3OH)]+, demonstrating the ejection of HNO2 involves intra-complex transfer of H from the methyl group methanol ligand. Subsequent collision-induced dissociation causes the elimination of 30 u (32 u for the complex with CD3OH), suggesting the elimination of formaldehyde (CH2 = O). The product ion is [ZnOH]+. Collision-induced dissociation of a precursor complex created using CH3-18OH shows the isotope label is retained in CH2 = O. Density functional theory calculations suggested that the “rearranged” product, ZnOH with bound HNO2 and formaldehyde is significantly lower in energy than ZnNO3 with bound methanol. We therefore used infrared multiple-photon photodissociation spectroscopy to determine the structures of both [ZnNO3(CH3OH)2]+ and [ZnNO3(CH3OH)]+. The infrared spectra clearly show that both ions contain intact nitrate and methanol ligands, which suggests that rearrangement occurs during collision-induced dissociation of [ZnNO3(CH3OH)]+. Based on the density functional theory calculations, we propose that transfer of H, from the methyl group of the CH3OH ligand to nitrate, occurs in concert with the formation of a Zn–C bond. After dissociation to release HNO2, the product rearranges with the insertion of the remaining O atom into the Zn–C bond. Subsequent C–O bond cleavage, with H transfer, produces an ion–molecule complex composed of [ZnOH]+ and O = CH2.
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- 2019
36. LABORATORY IR SPECTRA OF PROTONATED FULLERENES
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Julianna Palotás, Giel Berden, Jonathan Martens, and Jos Oomens
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Fullerene ,Chemistry ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Protonation ,Photochemistry - Published
- 2021
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37. Characterization of Uranyl Coordinated by Equatorial Oxygen: Oxo in UO
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Eric, Renault, Jiwen, Jian, Rémi, Maurice, Michael J, van Stipdonk, Irena J, Tatosian, Amanda R, Bubas, Jonathan, Martens, Giel, Berden, Jos, Oomens, and John K, Gibson
- Abstract
Uranium trioxide, UO
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- 2021
38. Metabolite Identification Using Infrared Ion Spectroscopy – Novel Biomarkers for Pyridoxine-Dependent Epilepsy
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Jos Oomens, Jonathan Martens, Karlien L.M. Coene, Thomas J. Boltje, Ron A. Wevers, Clara D.M. van Karnebeek, Floris P. J. T. Rutjes, Jasmin Mecinović, Leo A. J. Kluijtmans, Marleen C. D. G. Huigen, Albrecht Berkessel, Thomas Thomulka, Mathias Paul, Giel Berden, Jona Merx, Udo F. H. Engelke, and Rianne E. van Outersterp
- Abstract
Untargeted LC-MS based metabolomics strategies are being increasingly applied in metabolite screening for a wide variety of medical conditions. The long-standing “grand challenge” in the utilization of this approach is metabolite identification – confidently determining the chemical structures of m/z-detected unknowns. Here, we use a novel workflow based on the detection of molecular features of interest by high-throughput untargeted LC-MS analysis of patient body fluids combined with targeted molecular identification of those features using infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS), effectively providing diagnostic IR fingerprints for mass-isolated targets. A significant advantage of this approach is that in silico predicted IR spectra of candidate chemical structures can be used to suggest the molecular structure of unknown features, thus mitigating the need for the synthesis of a broad range of physical reference standards. Pyridoxine dependent epilepsy (PDE-ALDH7A1) is an inborn error of lysine metabolism, resulting from a mutation in the ALDH7A1 gene that leads to an accumulation of toxic levels of α-aminoadipic semialdehyde (α-AASA), piperideine-6-carboxylate (P6C), and pipecolic acid in body fluids. While α-AASA and P6C are known biomarkers for PDE in urine, their instability makes them poor candidates for diagnostic analysis from blood, which would be required for application in newborn screening protocols. Here, we use combined untargeted metabolomics-IRIS to identify several new biomarkers for PDE-ALDH7A1 that can be used for diagnostic analysis in urine, plasma, and cerebrospinal fluids, and are compatible with analysis in dried blood spots for newborn screening. The identification of these novel metabolites has directly rendered novel insights in the pathophysiology of PDE-ALDH7A1.
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- 2021
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39. Identification of novel biomarkers for pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy using untargeted metabolomics and infrared ion spectroscopy - biochemical insights and clinical implications
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Laura A. Tseng, Laura A. Jansen, Karlien L.M. Coene, Jos Oomens, Thomas J. Boltje, van Karnebeek Cd, van Outersterp Re, Leo A. J. Kluijtmans, van Rooij A, Saadet Mercimek-Andrews, Hilal H. Al-Shekaili, Ron A. Wevers, Purva Kulkarni, Levinus A. Bok, Michèl A.A.P. Willemsen, Jona Merx, Marleen C. D. G. Huigen, Broekman S, Struys Ea, Udo F. H. Engelke, Tessa M. A. Peters, Blair R. Leavitt, de Vrieze E, Sidney M. Gospe, Jasmin Mecinović, Jonathan Martens, van Geenen Fa, Giel Berden, Keith Hyland, Floris P. J. T. Rutjes, and van Wijk E
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Newborn screening ,biology ,Catabolism ,business.industry ,Neurotoxicity ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Epilepsy ,medicine ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Ketosis ,business ,Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy ,Zebrafish - Abstract
Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy (PDE-ALDH7A1), also known as antiquitin deficiency, is an inborn error of lysine metabolism that presents with refractory epilepsy in newborns. Bi-allelic ALDH7A1 variants lead to deficiency of α-aminoadipic semialdehyde dehydrogenase, resulting in accumulation of piperideine-6-carboxylate (P6C), and secondary deficiency of the important co-factor pyridoxal-5’-phosphate (PLP, active vitamin B6) through its complexation with P6C. Vitamin B6 supplementation resolves epilepsy in patients, but despite this treatment, intellectual disability may occur. Early diagnosis and treatment, preferably based on newborn screening, potentially optimize long-term clinical outcome. However, the currently known diagnostic PDE-ALDH7A1 biomarkers are incompatible with newborn screening procedures. Using a combination of the innovative analytical methods untargeted metabolomics and infrared ion spectroscopy, we have been able to discover novel biomarkers for PDE-ALDH7A1: 2S,6S-and 2S,6R-oxopropylpiperidine-2-carboxylic acid (2-OPP) and 6-oxopiperidine-2-carboxylic acid (6-oxoPIP). We demonstrate the applicability of 2-OPP as a PDE-ALDH7A1 biomarker in newborn screening. Additionally, we show that 2-OPP accumulates in brain tissue of patients and Aldh7a1 knock-out mice, and induces epilepsy-like behavior in a zebrafish model system. We speculate that 2-OPP may contribute to ongoing neurotoxicity, also in treated PDE-ALDH7A1 patients. As 2-OPP formation appears to increase upon ketosis, we emphasize the importance of avoiding catabolism in PDE-ALDH7A1 patients.
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- 2021
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40. Isomer-Specific Two-Color Double-Resonance IR
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Fred A M G, van Geenen, Ruben F, Kranenburg, Arian C, van Asten, Jonathan, Martens, Jos, Oomens, and Giel, Berden
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Psychotropic Drugs ,Molecular Structure ,Infrared Rays ,Lasers ,Spectrum Analysis ,Forensic Sciences ,Article ,Methamphetamine - Abstract
The capability of an ion trap mass spectrometer to store ions for an arbitrary amount of time allows the use of a single infrared (IR) laser to perform two-color double resonance IR–IR spectroscopic experiments on mass-to-charge (m/z) selected ions. In this single-laser IR2MS3 scheme, one IR laser frequency is used to remove a selected set of isomers from the total trapped ion population and the second IR laser frequency, from the same laser, is used to record the IR spectrum of the remaining precursor ions. This yields isomer-specific vibrational spectra of the m/z-selected ions, which can reveal the structure and identity of the initially co-isolated isomeric species. The use of a single laser greatly reduces the experimental complexity of two-color IR2MS3 and enhances its application in fields employing analytical MS. In this work, we demonstrate the methodology by acquiring single-laser IR2MS3 spectra in a forensic context, identifying two previously unidentified isomeric novel psychoactive substances (NPS) from a sample that was confiscated by the Amsterdam Police.
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- 2021
41. Infrared multiple photon dissociation action spectroscopy of protonated unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine and proton-bound dimers of hydrazine and unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine
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Giel Berden, Christopher P. McNary, M. T. Rodgers, Jonathan Martens, Jos Oomens, P. B. Armentrout, Maria Demireva, L. A. Hamlow, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Proton ,Hydrazine ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Protonation ,Photochemistry ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,Unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Infrared multiphoton dissociation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Spectroscopy ,Conformational isomerism - Abstract
The gas-phase structures of protonated unsymmetrical 1,1-dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) and the proton-bound dimers of UDMH and hydrazine are examined by infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) action spectroscopy utilizing light generated by a free electron laser and an optical parametric oscillator laser system. To identify the structures present in the experimental studies, the measured IRMPD spectra are compared to spectra calculated at the B3LYP-GD3BJ/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory. These comparisons show that protonated UDMH binds the proton at the methylated nitrogen atom (α) with two low-lying α conformers probably being populated. For (UDMH)2H+, the proton is shared between the methylated nitrogen atoms with several low-lying α conformers likely to be populated. Higher-lying conformers of (UDMH)2H+ in which the proton is shared between α and β (unmethylated) nitrogen atoms cannot be ruled out on the basis of the IRPMD spectrum. For (N2H4)2H+, there are four low-lying conformers that all reproduce the IRMPD spectrum reasonably well. As hydrazine and UDMH see usage as fuels for rocket engines, such spectra are potentially useful as a means of remotely monitoring rocket launches, especially in cases of unsuccessful launches where environmental hazards need to be assessed.
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- 2021
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42. Evaluation of Superior Graphite in a Lipseal Formulation
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Edward Terrill, Joe Fiocca, Jonathan Martens, and Rijo Jacob Robin
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- 2021
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43. Amadori rearrangement products as potential biomarkers for inborn errors of amino-acid metabolism
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Marleen C. D. G. Huigen, Sam J. Moons, Jos Oomens, Jonathan Martens, H.A.C.M. Bentlage, Rianne E. van Outersterp, Karlien L.M. Coene, Leo A. J. Kluijtmans, Clara D.M. van Karnebeek, Arno van Rooij, Udo F. H. Engelke, Tessa M. A. Peters, Siebolt de Boer, Thomas J. Boltje, Ed van der Heeft, Giel Berden, Ron A. Wevers, Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI), Amsterdam Neuroscience - Cellular & Molecular Mechanisms, and Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
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Blood Glucose ,Glycation End Products, Advanced ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Cancer development and immune defence Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 2] ,Lysine ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Phenylalanine ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glycation ,Amadori rearrangement ,Citrulline ,Biology (General) ,Child ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Chemistry ,Metabolic Disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 6] ,Middle Aged ,Disorders of movement Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 3] ,Biochemistry ,Child, Preschool ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Adult ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Adolescent ,QH301-705.5 ,Other Research Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 0] ,Synthetic Organic Chemistry ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Metabolomics ,Humans ,Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Methionine ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Metabolism ,0104 chemical sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The identification of disease biomarkers plays a crucial role in developing diagnostic strategies for inborn errors of metabolism and understanding their pathophysiology. A primary metabolite that accumulates in the inborn error phenylketonuria is phenylalanine, however its levels do not always directly correlate with clinical outcomes. Here we combine infrared ion spectroscopy and NMR spectroscopy to identify the Phe-glucose Amadori rearrangement product as a biomarker for phenylketonuria. Additionally, we find analogous amino acid-glucose metabolites formed in the body fluids of patients accumulating methionine, lysine, proline and citrulline. Amadori rearrangement products are well-known intermediates in the formation of advanced glycation end-products and have been associated with the pathophysiology of diabetes mellitus and ageing, but are now shown to also form under conditions of aminoacidemia. They represent a general class of metabolites for inborn errors of amino acid metabolism that show potential as biomarkers and may provide further insight in disease pathophysiology., Rianne van Outersterp et al. combine mass spectrometry, NMR, and infrared ion spectroscopy to identify amino acid-hexose conjugates in the blood plasma from patients with metabolic disorders such as phenylketonuria (PKU). These conjugates, or Amadori rearrangement products, are generally not detectable in blood samples from unaffected individuals, and may therefore represent disease biomarkers.
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- 2021
44. Effect of Polymer Type on Vibration Isolator Performance
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Edward Terrill, Barry Palmer, Jonathan Martens, Doug Paschall, Adel Halasa, and Brendan Rodgers
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- 2021
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45. An investigation of inter-ligand coordination and flexibility: IRMPD spectroscopic and theoretical evaluation of calcium and nickel histidine dimers
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Brandon C. Stevenson, Katrin Peckelsen, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, Mathias Schäfer, P. B. Armentrout, and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Ligand ,Carboxylic acid ,Ab initio ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Crystallography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Deprotonation ,chemistry ,Imidazole ,Carboxylate ,Infrared multiphoton dissociation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Protein secondary structure ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Metallated gas-phase structures consisting of an intact and deprotonated histidine (His) ligand, M(His-H)(His)+, where M = Ca and Ni, were examined using infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) action spectroscopy utilizing light from a free-electron laser (FEL). In parallel, ab initio quantum-chemical calculations identified several low-energy isomers for each complex. Experimental action spectra were compared to linear absorption spectra calculated at the B3LYP level of theory, using the 6-311+G(d,p) basis set. Single-point energies were calculated at B3LYP, B3LYP-GD3BJ, B3P86, and MP2(full) levels using the 6-311+G(2d,2p) basis set. For Ca(His-H)(His)+, the dominant structure has the metal center coordinating with the π nitrogen of the imidazole ring (Nπ) and both oxygen atoms of the carboxylate group of the deprotonated His ligand while coordinating with the backbone amine (Nα), Nπ, and the carbonyl oxygen of the carboxylic acid of the intact His ligand. The Ni(His-H)(His)+ species coordinates the metal ion through Nα, Nπ, and the carbonyl oxygen for both the deprotonated and intact His ligands, but also shows evidence for a minor secondary structure where the deprotonated His coordinates the metal at Nα, Nπ, and the deprotonated carbonyl oxygen and the intact His ligand is zwitterionic, coordinating the metal with both carboxylate oxygens. Different levels of theory predict different ground structures, highlighting the need for utilizing multiple levels of theory to help identify the gas-phase structure actually observed experimentally.
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- 2021
46. Characterization of Uranyl Coordinated by Equatorial Oxygen: Oxo in UO3 versus Oxyl in UO3+
- Author
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John K. Gibson, Jiwen Jian, Rémi Maurice, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, Amanda R. Bubas, Michael J. Van Stipdonk, Eric Renault, Irena Tatosian, Chimie Et Interdisciplinarité : Synthèse, Analyse, Modélisation (CEISAM), Université de Nantes - UFR des Sciences et des Techniques (UN UFR ST), Université de Nantes (UN)-Université de Nantes (UN)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC), Laboratoire de physique subatomique et des technologies associées (SUBATECH), Université de Nantes (UN)-Université de Nantes (UN)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-IMT Atlantique Bretagne-Pays de la Loire (IMT Atlantique), Institut Mines-Télécom [Paris] (IMT)-Institut Mines-Télécom [Paris] (IMT), and Molecular Spectroscopy (HIMS, FNWI)
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Denticity ,Trans effect ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,Atomic ,01 natural sciences ,Medicinal chemistry ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Theoretical and Computational Chemistry ,Uranium trioxide ,Nuclear ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,[PHYS]Physics [physics] ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Ligand ,Molecular ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Uranyl ,0104 chemical sciences ,Uranyl nitrate ,chemistry ,Uranyl hydroxide ,0210 nano-technology ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) - Abstract
Uranium trioxide, UO3, has a T-shaped structure with bent uranyl, UO22+, coordinated by an equatorial oxo, O2-. The structure of cation UO3+ is similar but with an equatorial oxyl, O center dot-. Neutral and cationic uranium trioxide coordinated by nitrates were characterized by collision induced dissociation (CID), infrared multiple-photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy, and density functional theory. CID of uranyl nitrate, [UO2 (NO3)3]- (complex A1), eliminates NO2 to produce nitrate-coordinated UO3+, [UO2 (O. )(NO3)2]-(B1), which ejects NO3 to yield UO3 in [UO2 (O)(NO3)]- (C1). Finally, C1 associates with H2O to afford uranyl hydroxide in [UO2(OH)2 (NO3)]- (D1). IRMPD of B1, C1, and D1 confirms uranyl equatorially coordinated by nitrate(s) along with the following ligands: (B1) radical oxyl O.-; (C1) oxo O2-; and (D1) two hydroxyls, OH- . As the nitrates are bidentate, the equatorial coordination is six in A1, five in B1, four in D1, and three in C1. Ligand congestion in low-coordinate C1 suggests orbital-directed bonding. Hydrolysis of the equatorial oxo in C1 epitomizes the inverse trans influence in UO3, which is uranyl with inert axial oxos and a reactive equatorial oxo. The uranyl v3 IR frequencies indicate the following donor ordering: O2- [best donor] >> O.- > OH-> NO3-.
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- 2021
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47. Structural determination of arginine-linked cisplatin complexes via IRMPD action spectroscopy: arginine binds to platinum via NO- binding mode
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C. C. He, Zachary J. Devereaux, Nathan A. Cunningham, Christine S. Chow, Jos Oomens, Jonathan Martens, L. A. Hamlow, Giel Berden, Bett Kimutai, M. T. Rodgers, and H. A. Roy
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Denticity ,Stereochemistry ,Chemistry ,Electrospray ionization ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Protonation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Side chain ,Moiety ,Infrared multiphoton dissociation ,Carboxylate ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Cisplatin, (NH3)2PtCl2, has been known as a successful metal-based anticancer drug for more than half a century. Its analogue, Argplatin, arginine-linked cisplatin, (Arg)PtCl2, is being investigated because it exhibits reactivity towards DNA and RNA that differs from that of cisplatin. In order to understand the basis for its altered reactivity, the deprotonated and sodium cationized forms of Argplatin, [(Arg-H)PtCl2]− and [(Arg)PtCl2 + Na]+, are examined by infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) action spectroscopy in the IR fingerprint and hydrogen-stretching regions. Complementary electronic structure calculations are performed using density functional theory approaches to characterize the stable structures of these complexes and to predict their infrared spectra. Comparison of the theoretical IR spectra predicted for various stable conformations of these Argplatin complexes to their measured IRMPD spectra enables determination of the binding mode(s) of Arg to the Pt metal center to be identified. Arginine is found to bind to Pt in a bidentate fashion to the backbone amino nitrogen and carboxylate oxygen atoms in both the [(Arg-H)PtCl2]− and [(Arg)PtCl2 + Na]+ complexes, the NO− binding mode. The neutral side chain of Arg also interacts with the Pt center to achieve additional stabilization in the [(Arg-H)PtCl2]− complex. In contrast, Na+ binds to both chlorido ligands in the [(Arg)PtCl2 + Na]+ complex and the protonated side chain of Arg is stabilized via hydrogen-bonding interactions with the carboxylate moiety. These findings are consistent with condensed-phase results, indicating that the NO− binding mode of arginine to Pt is preserved in the electrospray ionization process even under variable pH and ionic strength.
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- 2021
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48. A vibrational spectroscopic and computational study of the structures of protonated imidacloprid and its fragmentation products in the gas phase
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Jonathan Martens, Kelsey J Menard, and Travis D. Fridgen
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FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Chemistry ,Infrared ,010401 analytical chemistry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Protonation ,010501 environmental sciences ,Photochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Dissociation (psychology) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Fragmentation (mass spectrometry) ,medicine ,Infrared multiphoton dissociation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,medicine.symptom ,Spectroscopy ,Isomerization ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy experiments in the 600-2000 cm-1 region and computational chemistry studies were combined with the aim of elucidating the structures of protonated imidacloprid (pIMI), and its unimolecular decomposition products. The computed IR spectra for the lowest energy structures for pIMI as well as for protonated desnitrosoimidacloprid, corresponding to the loss of NO radical (pIMI-NO), and protonated imidacloprid urea corresponding to the loss of N2O (pIMIU) were found to reproduce the experimental IRMPD spectrum quite well. The complex IRMPD spectrum for protonated desnitroimidaclpride (pDIMI), resulting from the loss of NO2 radical from pIMI, was explained as a contribution from several computed structures, including those involving simple loss of NO2 radical and some isomerization. However, based on a comparison of the computed IR spectrum for the lowest energy structure of pDIMI and the IRMPD spectrum, it was concluded that the lowest energy structure is a minor contributor to the experimental spectrum. This observation is rationalized as being due to the energy requirement for isomerization to the lowest energy structure, being substantially higher than that for simple loss of NO2 radical. Experimental mass spectrometry fragmentation results indicated that the loss of N, O2, H was the result of a loss of NO radical followed by loss of OH radical. A comparison of the experimental IRMPD and computed IR spectra revealed that following NO radical loss, the structure entailing a hydride shift from the methylene bridge to the guanidine moiety followed by OH radical elimination, generated the best match with the experimental IRMPD spectrum. This was consistent with the computed potential energy surfaces showing this structure as having the lowest energy requirement.
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- 2021
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49. The Infrared Spectrum of Protonated C-70
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Jonathan Martens, Jos Oomens, Giel Berden, and Julianna Palotás
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Physics ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,Infrared ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Protonation ,Molecular spectroscopy ,010402 general chemistry ,Photochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Interstellar medium ,13. Climate action ,Space and Planetary Science ,0103 physical sciences ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics - Abstract
With the detection of C60, C70, and in the interstellar medium, fullerenes are currently the largest molecules identified in space. The relatively high proton affinities of C60 and C70 support the hypothesis that protonated fullerenes may also be abundant in the interstellar matter. Here, we present the first experimental vibrational spectrum of C70H+, recorded in the gas phase. The attachment of a proton to C70 causes a drastic symmetry lowering, which results in a rich vibrational spectrum. As compared to C60, where all C-atoms are equivalent due to the icosahedral symmetry, C70 belongs to the D5h point group and has five nonequivalent C-atoms, which are available as protonation sites. Combined analysis of the experimental spectrum and spectra computed at the density functional theory level enables us to evaluate the protonation isomers being formed. We compare the IR spectra of C60H+ and C70H+ to IR emission spectra from planetary nebulae, which suggests that a mixture of these fullerene analogs could contribute to their IR emission.
- Published
- 2021
50. Radical-Pairing Interactions in a Molecular Switch Evidenced by Ion Mobility Spectrometry and Infrared Ion Spectroscopy
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Damien Sluysmans, Benoît Mignolet, Anne-Sophie Duwez, Edwin De Pauw, Jos Oomens, J. Fraser Stoddart, Emeline Hanozin, Jonathan Martens, Giel Berden, Denis Morsa, and Gauthier Eppe
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Materials science ,Ion-mobility spectrometry ,Supramolecular chemistry ,Infrared spectroscopy ,010402 general chemistry ,Mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Supramolecular Chemistry ,Catalysis ,Ion ,donor-acceptor foldamer ,ion mobility ,infrared spectroscopy ,Research Articles ,mass spectrometry ,Molecular switch ,FELIX Molecular Structure and Dynamics ,010405 organic chemistry ,Foldamer ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,electron transfer ,Molecular machine ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemical physics ,Research Article - Abstract
The digital revolution sets a milestone in the progressive miniaturization of working devices and in the underlying advent of molecular machines. Foldamers involving mechanically entangled components with modular secondary structures are among the most promising designs for molecular switch‐based applications. Characterizing the nature and dynamics of their intramolecular network following the application of a stimulus is the key to their performance. Here, we use non‐dissociative electron transfer as a reductive stimulus in the gas phase and probe the consecutive co‐conformational transitions of a donor‐acceptor oligorotaxane foldamer using electrospray mass spectrometry interfaced with ion mobility and infrared ion spectroscopy. A comparison of collision cross section distributions for analogous closed‐shell and radical molecular ions sheds light on their respective formation energetics, while variations in their respective infrared absorption bands evidence changes in intramolecular organization as the foldamer becomes more compact. These differences are compatible with the advent of radical‐pairing interactions., Gas‐phase non‐dissociative electron transfer is used for charge reduction of a donor‐acceptor oligorotaxane foldamer (green). The consecutive co‐conformational transition is monitored using ion mobility spectrometry and infrared ion spectroscopy. Comparing the collision cross section distributions (blue) and infrared spectra (red) recorded for analogous closed‐shell and radical systems highlights differences that can be attributed to radical‐pairing interactions.
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- 2021
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