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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth C. Griffith is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth C. Griffith.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

In situ observation of peptide bond formation at the water–air interface

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Veronica Vaida

We report unambiguous spectroscopic evidence of peptide bond formation at the air–water interface, yielding a possible mechanism providing insight into the formation of modern ribosomal peptide bonds, and a means for the emergence of peptides on early Earth. Protein synthesis in aqueous environments, facilitated by sequential amino acid condensation forming peptides, is a ubiquitous process in modern biology, and a fundamental reaction necessary in prebiotic chemistry. Such reactions, however, are condensation reactions, requiring the elimination of a water molecule for every peptide bond formed, and are thus unfavorable in aqueous environments both from a thermodynamic and kinetic point of view. We use the hydrophobic environment of the air–water interface as a favorable venue for peptide bond synthesis, and demonstrate the occurrence of this chemistry with in situ techniques using Langmuir-trough methods and infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy. Leucine ethyl ester (a small amino acid ester) first partitions to the water surface, then coordinates with Cu2+ ions at the interface, and subsequently undergoes a condensation reaction selectively forming peptide bonds at the air–water interface.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Photochemistry of aqueous pyruvic acid

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Barry K. Carpenter; Richard K. Shoemaker; Veronica Vaida

The study of organic chemistry in atmospheric aerosols and cloud formation is of interest in predictions of air quality and climate change. It is now known that aqueous phase chemistry is important in the formation of secondary organic aerosols. Here, the photoreactivity of pyruvic acid (PA; CH3COCOOH) is investigated in aqueous environments characteristic of atmospheric aerosols. PA is currently used as a proxy for α-dicarbonyls in atmospheric models and is abundant in both the gas phase and the aqueous phase (atmospheric aerosols, fog, and clouds) in the atmosphere. The photoreactivity of PA in these phases, however, is very different, thus prompting the need for a mechanistic understanding of its reactivity in different environments. Although the decarboxylation of aqueous phase PA through UV excitation has been studied for many years, its mechanism and products remain controversial. In this work, photolysis of aqueous PA is shown to produce acetoin (CH3CHOHCOCH3), lactic acid (CH3CHOHCOOH), acetic acid (CH3COOH), and oligomers, illustrating the progression from a three-carbon molecule to four-carbon and even six-carbon molecules through direct photolysis. These products are detected using vibrational and electronic spectroscopy, NMR, and MS, and a reaction mechanism is presented accounting for all products detected. The relevance of sunlight-initiated PA chemistry in aqueous environments is then discussed in the context of processes occurring on atmospheric aerosols.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Photochemical Kinetics of Pyruvic Acid in Aqueous Solution

Allison E. Reed Harris; Barbara Ervens; Richard K. Shoemaker; Jay A. Kroll; Rebecca J. Rapf; Elizabeth C. Griffith; Anne Monod; Veronica Vaida

Pyruvic acid in the atmosphere is found in both the gas and aqueous phases, and its behavior gives insight into that of other α-keto acids. Photolysis is a significant degradation pathway for this molecule in the environment, and in aqueous solution the major photoproducts are higher-molecular-weight compounds that may contribute to secondary organic aerosol mass. The kinetics of the aqueous-phase photolysis of pyruvic acid under aerobic and anaerobic conditions was investigated in order to calculate the first-order rate constant, Jaq, in solution. Analysis of the exponential decay of pyruvic acid was performed by monitoring both pyruvic acid and its photolytic products over the course of the reaction by (1)H NMR spectroscopy. Detection of major and minor products in the 0.1, 0.05, and 0.02 M pyruvic acid photolyses clearly demonstrates that the primary reaction pathways are highly dependent on the initial pyruvic acid concentration and the presence of dissolved oxygen. The Jaq values were calculated with approximations based on the dominant pathways for limiting cases of the mechanism. Finally, a model study using the calculated rate constants demonstrates the importance of aqueous-phase photolysis as a sink for pyruvic acid in the atmosphere, compared with gas-phase photolysis and OH oxidation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Ionization state of L-phenylalanine at the air-water interface.

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Veronica Vaida

The ionization state of organic molecules at the air-water interface and the related problem of the surface pH of water have significant consequences on the catalytic role of the surface in chemical reactions and are currently areas of intense research and controversy. In this work, infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) is used to identify changes in the ionization state of L-phenylalanine in the surface region versus the bulk aqueous solution. L-phenylalanine has the unique advantage of possessing two different hydrophilic groups, a carboxylic acid and an amine base, which can deprotonate and protonate respectively depending on the ionic environment they experience at the water surface. In this work, the polar group vibrations in the surface region are identified spectroscopically in varying bulk pH solutions, and are subsequently compared with the ionization state of the polar groups of molecules residing in the bulk environment. The polar groups of L-phenylalanine at the surface transition to their deprotonated state at bulk pH values lower than the molecules residing in the bulk, indicating a decrease in their pK(a) at the surface, and implying an enhanced hydroxide ion concentration in the surface region relative to the bulk.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Interaction of L-Phenylalanine with a Phospholipid Monolayer at the Water-Air Interface.

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Russell J. Perkins; Dana-Marie Telesford; Ellen M. Adams; Lukasz Cwiklik; Heather C. Allen; Martina Roeselová; Veronica Vaida

The interaction of L-phenylalanine with a 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) monolayer at the air-water interface was explored using a combination of experimental techniques and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. By means of Langmuir trough methods and Brewster angle microscopy, L-phenylalanine was shown to significantly alter the interfacial tension and the surface domain morphology of the DPPC film. In addition, confocal microscopy was used to explore the aggregation state of L-phenylalanine in the bulk aqueous phase. Finally, MD simulations were performed to gain molecular-level information on the interactions of L-phenylalanine and DPPC at the interface. Taken together, these results show that L-phenylalanine intercalates into a DPPC film at the air-water interface, thereby affecting the surface tension, phase morphology, and ordering of the DPPC film. The results are discussed in the context of biological systems and the mechanism of diseases such as phenylketonuria.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2013

Sunlight-initiated Chemistry of Aqueous Pyruvic Acid: Building Complexity in the Origin of Life

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Richard K. Shoemaker; Veronica Vaida

Coupling chemical reactions to an energy source is a necessary step in the origin of life. Here, we utilize UV photons provided by a simulated sun to activate aqueous pyruvic acid and subsequently prompt chemical reactions mimicking some of the functions of modern metabolism. Pyruvic acid is interesting in a prebiotic context due to its prevalence in modern metabolism and its abiotic availability on early Earth. Here, pyruvic acid (CH3COCOOH, a C3 molecule) photochemically reacts to produce more complex molecules containing four or more carbon atoms. Acetoin (CH3CHOHCOCH3), a C4 molecule and a modern bacterial metabolite, is produced in this chemistry as well as lactic acid (CH3CHOHCOOH), a molecule which, when coupled with other abiotic chemical reaction pathways, can provide a regeneration pathway for pyruvic acid. This chemistry is discussed in the context of plausible environments on early Earth such as near the ocean surface and atmospheric aerosol particles. These environments allow for combination and exchange of reactants and products of other reaction environments (such as shallow hydrothermal vents). The result could be a contribution to the steady increase in chemical complexity requisite in the origin of life.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2017

Multiphase Photochemistry of Pyruvic Acid under Atmospheric Conditions

Allison E. Reed Harris; Aki Pajunoja; Mathieu Cazaunau; Aline Gratien; E. Pangui; Anne Monod; Elizabeth C. Griffith; Annele Virtanen; Jean-François Doussin; Veronica Vaida

Aerosol and molecular processing in the atmosphere occurs in a complex and variable environment consisting of multiple phases and interfacial regions. To explore the effects of such conditions on the reactivity of chemical systems, we employ an environmental simulation chamber to investigate the multiphase photolysis of pyruvic acid, which photoreacts in the troposphere in aqueous particles and in the gas phase. Upon irradiation of nebulized pyruvic acid, acetic acid and carbon dioxide are rapidly generated, which is consistent with previous literature on the bulk phase photolysis reactions. Additionally, we identify a new C6 product, zymonic acid, a species that has not previously been reported from pyruvic acid photolysis under any conditions. Its observation here, and corresponding spectroscopic signatures, indicates it could be formed by heterogeneous reactions at the droplet surface. Prior studies of the aqueous photolysis of pyruvic acid have shown that high-molecular-weight compounds are formed via radical reactions; however, they are inhibited by the presence of oxygen, leading to doubt as to whether the chemistry would occur in the atmosphere. Identification of dimethyltartaric acid from the photolysis of multiphase pyruvic acid in air confirms radical polymerization chemistry can compete with oxygen reactions to some extent under aerobic conditions. Evidence of additional polymerization within the particles during irradiation is suggested by the increasing viscosity and organic content of the particles. The implications of multiphase specific processes are then discussed within the broader scope of atmospheric science.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Reply to Eugene et al.: Photochemistry of aqueous pyruvic acid

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Barry K. Carpenter; Richard K. Shoemaker; Veronica Vaida

In their letter, Eugene et al. (1) disregard the irrefutable NMR evidence of Griffith et al. (2), presented in support of the minor products acetoin, lactic, and acetic acid in the photolysis of aqueous phase pyruvic acid (PA) (Eugene et al. erroneously state that Griffith et al. claim these as major products). In addition, Eugene et al. (1) argue against Griffith et al.’s mechanism, specifically acetolactic acid decarboxylation, instead favoring their long-range electron transfer mechanism (3, 4). The authors’ objections are addressed below.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Photoinitiated synthesis of self-assembled vesicles.

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Rebecca J. Rapf; Richard K. Shoemaker; Barry K. Carpenter; Veronica Vaida


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Hydrophobic collapse of a stearic acid film by adsorbed l-phenylalanine at the air-water interface.

Elizabeth C. Griffith; Ellen M. Adams; Heather C. Allen; Veronica Vaida

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Veronica Vaida

University of Colorado Boulder

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Richard K. Shoemaker

University of Colorado Boulder

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Rebecca J. Rapf

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Anne Monod

Aix-Marseille University

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Russell J. Perkins

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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A. F. Tuck

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Geoffrey S. Tyndall

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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