The efect of pH and ionic strength on the association and dissociation phenomena of pea 11.9-type globulin (legumin) was investigated. I t was shown by ultracentrijigation and HPLC that the native conformation was maintained only in the pH range 7 to 9. At extreme acidic or basic pH most of the molecules were dissociated. Below pH 3.4 the 12s native form was completely dissociated, and at pH 2.4 only very slow sedimenting components (3.5s) were observed. At low ionic strength aggregation usually occurred.These results were confirmed by U V diference spectroscopy, and it was observed that acidic conditions induced a drastic dissociation of legumin leading to completely unfolded subunits. In this conformation all the tyrosine and tryptophan residues were exposed as shown by second derivative spectra. This spectroscopic study led also to hypotheses on the native structure of legumin and especially on the respective positions of the basic and acidic polypeptides.
HCN is a molecule of astrochemical interest. In this study, it was produced in cryogenic Ar and Kr matrices from UV-photolyzed diacetylene/cyanodiacetylene mixtures. Its strong phosphorescence was discovered and served for the identification of the compound. Vibrationally resolved phosphorescence excitation spectra gave insight into excited singlet electronic states. Two electronic systems were observed around 26 000-34 000 cm and 35 000-50 000 cm. Energies of the second excited singlet and the lowest triplet state were derived from analysis of these systems. Vibrational and electronic spectroscopic features were assigned with the assistance of density functional theory calculations. Some trends concerning the electronic spectroscopy of HCN family molecules are presented.
The photochemistry of the chelated enol form of acetylacetone (AcAc) was investigated by UV excitation of the S(2) state at 266 nm in parahydrogen matrices, complemented by experiments in neon and normal hydrogen matrices. Infrared (IR) spectroscopy, combined with theoretical calculations, was used to identify the photoproducts. Isomerization towards various non-chelated forms (no intramolecular H-bond) of AcAc is the dominant channel whereas fragmentation is very minor. The isomerization kinetics is monitored by IR spectroscopy. Among the seven non-chelated conformers of AcAc, only three are formed in parahydrogen matrices, whereas four are observed in normal hydrogen matrices. This difference suggests that an active tunnelling process between conformers occurs in parahydrogen but is quenched in normal hydrogen where guest-host interactions are stronger. Fragmentation and isomerization of excited AcAc are discussed in the light of these new data. The role of the intermediate triplet state in the S(2)→ S(0) relaxation is confirmed, as the importance of phonons in the condensed phase.
The infrared spectrum of glycolaldehyde sugar model in solid parahydrogen is reported and interpreted in the light of ab initio anharmonic frequency calculations. The advantages of parahydrogen lead to a simplification of its infrared spectroscopy compared to other conventional matrices. Surprisingly, the sugar molecule is found to display an unexpected large bandwidth compared to the smaller organic molecules studied in parahydrogen so far. Among them, only glycolaldehyde possesses an internal hydrogen-bond. Band broadening in glycolaldehyde is interpreted as originating mainly from the presence of the hydrogen-bond and to a lesser extent from clustering with oH(2) impurities.
The chelated enol isomer of 2-chloromalonaldehyde (2-ClMA) is experimentally characterized for the first time by IR and Raman spectroscopies. The spectra are obtained by trapping the molecule in cryogenic matrices and analyzed with the assistance of theoretical calculations. Experiments were performed in argon, neon and para-hydrogen matrices. The results highlight puzzling matrix effects, beyond site effects, which are interpreted as due to a tunneling splitting of the vibrational levels related to the proton transfer along the internal hydrogen bond (IHB). 2-ClMA is thus one of the very few molecules in which the H tunneling has been observed in cryogenic matrices. The comparison with its parent molecule (malonaldehyde) shows experimentally and theoretically the weakening of the IHB upon chlorination, with a reduced cooperative effect in the resonance assisted hydrogen bond. In addition, the Cl substitution induces an important stabilization of two open enol conformers. These two open forms appear in the spectra of as-deposited samples, meaning that, in contrast with other well-studied molecules of the same family (β-dialdehydes and β-diketones), they are present in the gas phase at room temperature.
The effect of deuteration of acetylacetone (C5O2H8) is explored by means of IR spectroscopy of its single and double deuterated isotopologues trapped in neon matrices. The whole vibrational spectra of chelated enols are very sensitive to the H-D exchange of the hydrogen atom involved in the internal hydrogen bond. UV excitation of double deuterated acetylacetone isolated in neon matrices induces the formation of four open enol isomers which can be divided into two groups of two conformers, depending on their formation kinetics. Within each group, one conformer is more stable than the other: slow conformer interconversion due to a tunneling process is observed in the dark at low temperature. Moreover, IR laser irradiation at the OD stretching overtone frequency is used to induce interconversion either from the most stable to the less stable conformer or the opposite, depending on the excitation wavelength. The interconversion process is of great help to assign conformers which are definitively identified by comparison between experimental and calculated IR spectra. Kinetic constants of the tunneling process at play are theoretically estimated and agree perfectly with experiments, including previous experiments with the totally hydrogenated acetylacetone [Lozada García et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012, 14, 3450].
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