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Infrared spectroscopy of phenylalanine Ag(I) and Zn(II) complexes in the gas phase
- Source :
- Journal of the American Chemical Society. 128(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Infrared multiple-photon dissociation (IR-MPD) spectroscopy has been applied to singly-charged complexes involving the transition metals Ag(+) and Zn(2+) with the aromatic amino acid phenylalanine. These studies are complemented by DFT calculations. For [Phe+Ag](+) the calculations favor a tridentate charge solvation N/O/ring structure. The experimental spectrum strongly supports this as the predominant binding geometry and, in particular, rules out a significant presence of the salt-bridge conformation. Zn(2+) forms a deprotonated dimer complex with Phe, [Zn+Phe(2)-H](+), in which the +2 oxidation state serves as a useful biomimetic model for zinc protein sites. A number of low-energy conformations were located, of which the lowest-energy conformer predicted by the calculations involves a Phe ligand deprotonated on the carboxylic acid, while the other Phe ligand is in the tridentate charge solvation conformation. The calculated IR spectrum of this conformer gives a close fit to the experimental spectrum, strongly supporting this as the predominant binding geometry. This most stable calculated complex is characterized by N/ O/ring metal chelation with a tetrahedral-type coordination core of Zn(2+) to N and O of both ligands. Another similar tightly chelated structure shows a square-planar-type coordination core, but this structure is computed to be less stable and gives a less satisfactory match to the experimental spectrum. This preference for the tetrahedral geometry of the Lewis-basic atomic ligands parallels the common Zn(II) coordination geometry in proteins. The number of clearly identifiable peaks resolved in the IR-MPD spectra as well as the much-improved matches between the observed spectra and the DFT-calculated spectra of the most stable geometries compared to previous studies are noteworthy for systems of this size and complexity. These results demonstrate that IR spectroscopy of transition metal-amino acid complexes in combination with DFT calculations is a very powerful structural tool, readily applicable to biomimetic systems that model, for example, the reaction centers of proteins in the solvent-free environment. In addition, we present a novel ion-capturing method for Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry which removes the necessity of a buffer gas pulse, while allowing ion trapping at moderate voltages with apparently reduced collisional excitation of the ions.
- Subjects :
- chemistry.chemical_classification
Models, Molecular
Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization
Silver
Fourier Analysis
Spectrophotometry, Infrared
Stereochemistry
Carboxylic acid
Dimer
Phenylalanine
Solvation
Infrared spectroscopy
General Chemistry
Biochemistry
Catalysis
Dissociation (chemistry)
Crystallography
chemistry.chemical_compound
Zinc
Colloid and Surface Chemistry
Deprotonation
chemistry
Oxidation state
Gases
Conformational isomerism
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00027863
- Volume :
- 128
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....aaae9f78baaca5c6959cd378a2568b6b