Changes in membrane potentials (potentiometric responses) induced by undissociated, neutral phenols (ArOH), though unexpected in terms of the conventional response mechanism for charged species, were systematically investigated using poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) matrix liquid membranes containing quaternary ammonium and phosphonium salts (Q + X -) as the sensory elements. The observed anionic responses were characteristic in that they accompanied large response slopes (-65 to -200 mV decade -1 ) and selectivities reflecting the acidity and lipophilicity of phenolic compounds. In two phase systems, the extracted and complexed ArOH (Q + X -+ ArOH f Q + X -‚ArOH) further underwent proton dissociation (Q + X -‚ArOH f Q + ArO -+ HX) with concomitant ejection of HX to the aqueous phase. Based on these experimental results, a model for potentiometric responses to neutral phenols, which explains the anionic responses on the basis of a decrease in the amount of the cationic and anionic species that are charge-separated across the membrane interface, was proposed. A theoretical treatment based on the above model reproduced the potentiometric response behaviors for undissociated phenols. This model was further supported by optical second harmonic generation (SHG), which enabled direct observation of the processes occurring at the interface of a liquid membrane and an aqueous solution.
We consider the problem of color regulation in visual pigments for both bovine rhodopsin (lambda max = 500 nm) and octopus rhodopsin (lambda max = 475 nm). Both pigments have 11-cis-retinal (lambda max = 379 nm, in ethanol) as their chromophore. These rhodopsins were bleached in their native membranes, and the opsins were regenerated with natural and artificial chromophores. Both bovine and octopus opsins were regenerated with the 9-cis- and 11-cis-retinal isomers, but the octopus opsin was additionally regenerated with the 13-cis and all-trans isomers. Titration of the octopus opsin with 11-cis-retinal gave an extinction coefficient for octopus rhodopsin of 27,000 +/- 3000 M-1 cm-1 at 475 nm. The absorption maxima of bovine artificial pigments formed by regenerating opsin with the 11-cis dihydro series of chromophores support a color regulation model for bovine rhodopsin in which the chromophore-binding site of the protein has two negative charges: one directly hydrogen bonded to the Schiff base nitrogen and another near carbon-13. Formation of octopus artificial pigments with both all-trans and 11-cis dihydro chromophores leads to a similar model for octopus rhodopsin and metarhodopsin: there are two negative charges in the chromophore-binding site, one directly hydrogen bonded to the Schiff base nitrogen and a second near carbon-13. The interaction of this second charge with the chromophore in octopus rhodopsin is weaker than in bovine, while in metarhodopsin it is as strong as in bovine.
A generalized model that describes apparently "non-Nernstian" equilibrium responses of ionophore-based ion-selective electrodes (ISEs) is presented. It is formulated for primary and secondary ions of any charges that enter the membrane phase and independently form complexes with the ionophore, respectively. Equations for the phase boundary potential model were solved numerically to obtain whole response curves as a function of the sample activity of the primary ion, and analytical solutions could be obtained for apparently non-Nernstian response sections in these response curves. Ionophore-based ISEs can give three types of apparently non-Nernstian equilibrium responses, i.e., apparently "super-Nernstian", "inverted-Nernstian", and "sub-Nernstian" responses. The values of the response slopes depend on the charge numbers of the primary and secondary ions and on the stoichiometries of their complexes with the ionophore. The theoretical predictions for super-Nernstian responses agree well with the experimental results obtained with ISEs based on acidic ionophores or metalloporphyrin ionophores. Also, theoretical response curves with inverted-Nernstian slopes were found to be similar in character to the pH responses of Ca2+-selective electrodes based on organophosphate ionophores, which have been known to exhibit a so-called "potential dip". The quantitative understanding of apparently non-Nernstian response slopes presented here provides an insight into ionophore-analyte complexation processes in ISE membranes and should be helpful for the design of new ionophores.
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