| Literature DB >> 29233214 |
Jae Kyoo Lee1, Hong Gil Nam2, Richard N Zare1.
Abstract
Kinetics of acid-induced chlorophyll demetallation was recorded in microdroplets by fusing a stream of microdroplets containing 40 µM chlorophyll a or b dissolved in methanol with a stream of aqueous microdroplets containing 35 mM hydrochloric acid (pH = 1·46). The kinetics of the demetallation of chlorophyll in the fused microdroplets (14 ± 6 µm diameter; 84 ± 18 m s-1 velocity) was recorded by controlling the traveling distance of the fused microdroplets between the fusion region and the inlet of a mass spectrometer. The rate of acid-induced chlorophyll demetallation was about 960 ± 120 times faster in the charged microdroplets compared with that reported in bulk solution. If no voltage was applied to the sprayed microdroplets, then the acceleration factor was about 580 ± 90, suggesting that the applied voltage is not a major factor determining the acceleration. Chlorophyll a was more rapidly demetallated than chlorophyll b by a factor of ~26 in bulk solution and ~5 in charged microdroplets. The demetallation kinetics was second order in the H+ concentration, but the acceleration factor of microdroplets compared with bulk solution appeared to be unchanged in going from pH = 1·3 to 7·0. The water:methanol ratio of the fused microdroplets was varied from 7:3 to 3:7 causing an increase in the reaction rate of chlorophyll a demetallation by 20%. This observation demonstrates that the solvent composition, which has different evaporation rates, does not significantly affect the acceleration. We believe that a major portion of the acceleration can be attributed to confinement effects involving surface reactions rather than either to evaporation of solvents or to the introduction of charges to the microdroplets.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29233214 PMCID: PMC5729759 DOI: 10.1017/S0033583517000014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Q Rev Biophys ISSN: 0033-5835 Impact factor: 5.318
Fig. 1(a) Reaction scheme of acid-induced demetallation of chlorophyll to form phaeophytin. Mass spectra of chlorophyll a, (b) before and (c) after adding 70 mM HCl.
Fig. 2Experimental setup for chlorophyll demetallation kinetics using microdroplet fusion mass spectrometry.
Fig. 4Kinetics of chlorophyll a demetallation recorded with microdroplet fusion mass spectrometry. The red line is the best fit to an exponential decay curve. EIC = extracted ion current.
Fig. 5Apparent rates of acid-induced chlorophyll a demetallation at different concentrations of hydrogen ion. The red line is the best fit to a quadratic dependence on [H+].
Fig. 6Effect of voltage applied to microdroplets on reaction rate acceleration factor compared with that in bulk solution.
Fig. 7Effect of solvent composition on the demetallation rate of chlorophyll a. MeOH denotes methanol.
Comparison of demetallation rates between chlorophyll a and b in microdroplets. The kinetic measurements were conducted in fused water:methanol (1:1, v/v) microdroplets containing 35 mM HCl and 40 μM chlorophylls under 5 kV spray condition
| Chlorophyll | Chlorophyll | |
|---|---|---|
| Rate constant in bulk solution (mM−2 s−1) | 0·048 | 0·0018 |
| Rate constant in microdroplets (mM−2 s−1) | 46 | 8·8 |
| Acceleration factor | 960 | 4900 |
Data taken from (Wilson & Konermann, 2003).
Data taken from (Gerola et al. 2011; Mazaki et al. 1992).