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1.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 12(5): 557-64, 2001 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11349953

ABSTRACT

The ion-molecule reactivity of the products formed in the association reactions of HCNH+ with C2H2 (C3H4N+) and C2H4 (C3H6N+) has been investigated to provide information on the structures of the adducts thus formed. The C3H4N+ and C3H6N+ adducts were formed in the reaction flow tube of a flowing afterglow sourced-selected ion flow tube (FA-SIFT) and their reactivity with a neutral molecular "probe" examined. The reactivity of possible known structural isomers for the C3H4N+ and C3H6N+ ions was investigated in both the FA-SIFT and an ion cyclotron resonance spectrometer (ICR). Ab initio investigations of the potential energy surfaces for both structures at the G2(MP2) level have also been performed and structures corresponding to local minima on both surfaces have been identified and evaluated. The results of these experimental and theoretical studies show that at room temperature, the C3H4N+ adduct ion contains two isomers; a less reactive one that is likely to be a four-membered cyclic covalent isomer (approximately 70%) and a faster reacting component that is probably an electrostatic complex (approximately 30%). The C3H6N+ adduct ion formed from HCNH+ + C2H4 at room temperature is a single isomer that is likely to be the four-membered covalently bound cyclic CH2CH2CHNH+ species.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11913459

ABSTRACT

Hydration of macromolecular structures determines biological activity. Stabilizing solutes are kosmotropic (increase order of water) rather than chaotropic (decrease order). Preferential hydration of surfaces is a thermodynamic consequence of the solution behavior of kosmotropic solutes, but inconsistencies imply interactions such as the hydration of specific sites within macromolecules. Thermodynamic measures require bulk pure solutes; here simpler measures of the effects on bulk water, water at surfaces and hydration water of probes have been applied to solutes including natural stabilizers, analogues and example chaotropes. Changes in the near-infrared spectra, water proton NMR chemical shifts and relaxation times measure changes in the bulk liquid; HPLC-column retention of solutes indicate interactions with hydration water at different surfaces, and fluorescence probes detect effects on functional group hydration water. Ab initio calculations and Monte-Carlo simulations of the solutes in water measure the energetics of the solute-water interactions, the dipole moments of these molecules, their charge distributions and the effect of the solute molecules on the structure of water. The rankings of the test solutes by these measures are not consistent. Thus, stabilizing solutes are not interchangeable in biological systems and the intracellular replacement of one by another could affect the integration of cell metabolism.


Subject(s)
Water/chemistry , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Fluorescent Dyes , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared
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