Literature DB >> 28949129

Impact of Amino Acids on the Isomerization of the Aluminum Tridecamer Al13.

Olivier Deschaume1, Eric Breynaert2, Sambhu Radhakrishnan2, Stef Kerkhofs2, Mohamed Haouas3, Ségolène Adam de Beaumais4, Valeria Manzin4, Jean-Baptiste Galey4, Laure Ramos-Stanbury5, Francis Taulelle2, Johan A Martens2, Carmen Bartic1.   

Abstract

The stability of the Keggin polycation ε-Al13 is monitored by 27Al NMR and ferron colorimetric assay upon heating aluminum aqueous solutions containing different amino acids with overall positive, negative, or no charge at pH 4.2. A focus on the effect of the amino acids on the isomerization process from ε- to δ-Al13 is made, compared and discussed as a function of the type of organic additive. Amino acids such as glycine and β-alanine, with only one functional group interacting relatively strongly with aluminum polycations, accelerate isomerization in a concentration-dependent manner. The effect of this class of amino acids is also found increasing with the pKa of their carboxylic acid moiety, from a low impact from proline up to more than a 15-fold increased rate from the stronger binders such as glycine or β-alanine. Amino acids with relatively low C-terminal pKa, but bearing additional potential binding moieties such as free alcohol (hydroxyl group) moiety of serine or the amide of glutamine, speed the isomerization comparatively and even more than glycine or β-alanine, glutamine leading to the fastest rates observed so far. With aspartic and glutamic acids, changes in aluminum speciation are faster and significant even at room temperature but rather related to the reorganization toward slow reacting complexed oligomers than to the Al13 isomerization process. The linear relation between the apparent rate constant of isomerization and the additive concentration points to a first-order process with respect to the additives. Most likely, the dominant process is an accelerated ε-Al13 dissociation, increasing the probability of δ isomer formation.

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 28949129     DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.7b01699

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inorg Chem        ISSN: 0020-1669            Impact factor:   5.165


  1 in total

1.  Structure-Function Correlations in the Mechanism of Action of Key Antiperspirant Agents Containing Al(III) and ZAG Salts.

Authors:  Arnab Dawn; Fred C Wireko; Andrei Shauchuk; Jennifer L L Morgan; John T Webber; Stevan D Jones; David Swaile; Harshita Kumari
Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces       Date:  2022-02-25       Impact factor: 9.229

  1 in total

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