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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey D. Steill is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey D. Steill.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Gas-Phase IR Spectroscopy of Deprotonated Amino Acids

Jos Oomens; Jeffrey D. Steill; Britta Redlich

Gas-phase infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectra have been recorded for the conjugate bases of a series of amino acids (Asp, Cys, Glu, Phe, Ser, Trp, Tyr). The spectra are dominated by strong symmetric and antisymmetric carboxylate stretching modes around 1300 and 1600 cm(-1), respectively. Comparison of the experimental spectra with spectra calculated at the DFT level suggests a carboxylate structure for all species investigated, which is in contrast with what has recently been suggested in this journal for deprotonated cysteine [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 5403-5407]. In addition, the IR spectrum of the conjugate base of tyrosine is also unambiguously that of a carboxylate ion and not that of a phenoxide ion. In sharp contrast with the conjugate bases of other amino acids investigated here, the aspartate and glutamate anions show very broad, hardly resolved spectral features. We present qualitative experimental evidence indicating that this can be attributed to the formation of a proton bridge between the backbone and side chain carboxylate groups. The large amplitude motion of this shared proton, coupling to virtually all other vibrational modes, causes extensive spectral broadening.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Infrared Multiphoton Dissociation Spectroscopy of Cationized Threonine : Effects of Alkali-Metal Cation Size on Gas-Phase Conformation

M. T. Rodgers; Jos Oomens; Jeffrey D. Steill

The gas-phase structures of alkali-metal cation complexes of threonine (Thr) are examined using infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy utilizing light generated by a free electron laser in conjunction with quantum chemical calculations. Spectra of Li+(Thr) and Na+(Thr) are similar and relatively simple, whereas K+(Thr), Rb+(Thr), and Cs+(Thr) include distinctive new IR bands. Measured IRMPD spectra are compared to spectra calculated at a B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level to identify the structures present in the experimental studies. For the smaller metal cations, the spectra match those predicted for charge-solvated structures in which the ligand exhibits tridentate coordination, M1[N,CO,OH], binding to the amide and carbonyl groups of the amino acid backbone and to the hydroxyl group of the side chain. K+(Thr), Rb+(Thr), and Cs+(Thr) exhibit evidence of the charge-solvated complex, M3[COOH], in which the metal cation binds to the carboxylic acid group. Evidence for a small population of the zwitterionic analogue of this structure, ZW[CO2-], is also present, particularly for the Cs+ complex. Calculations indicate that the relative stability of the M3[COOH] structure is very strongly dependent on the size of the metal cation, consistent with the range of conformations observed experimentally. The present results are similar to those obtained previously for the analogous M+(Ser) complexes, although there are subtle distinctions that are discussed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Gas-Phase Deprotonation of p-Hydroxybenzoic Acid Investigated by IR Spectroscopy: Solution-Phase Structure Is Retained upon ESI

Jeffrey D. Steill; Jos Oomens

The gas-phase structure of the conjugate base of p-hydroxybenzoic acid (and related compounds) and the influence of the solvent used in its generation by electrospray ionization have recently been under debate. While the phenoxide structure is known to be lower in energy in the gas phase, the carboxylate structure is favored in aqueous solution, fuelling the controversy. Here we probe the structure of this gas-phase anion by IR spectroscopy and show that its structure is determined by the protic or aprotic nature of the solvent, which suggests that it is the solution-phase structure that is transferred to the gas phase.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Structures of Protonated Dipeptides: The Role of Arginine in Stabilizing Salt Bridges

James S. Prell; Jeremy T. O'Brien; Jeffrey D. Steill; Jos Oomens; Evan R. Williams

Structures of protonated dipeptides containing N-terminal Gly, Val, Pro, Lys, His, or Arg and C-terminal Arg are investigated with infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy between 900 and 1850 cm(-1) and theory. The IRMPD spectra clearly indicate that, when Gly, Val, Pro, Lys, or His are N-terminal to Arg, these protonated dipeptides adopt gas-phase structures with a single formal charge site (SCS), whereas ArgArg x H(+) has a salt-bridge (SB) structure in which the C-terminus is deprotonated and two basic sites are protonated. There are only subtle differences in the IRMPD spectra for dipeptides containing Gly, Val, Pro, and Lys. A sharp, intense peak at 1080 cm(-1) is observed for HisArg x H(+) that is attributed to the neutral histidine side chain, an assignment that is confirmed by comparison to the IRMPD spectrum of (HisArg x H(2))(2+). Lowest-energy B3LYP/6-31+G(d,p) structures and energies for the SCS and SB forms of these protonated dipeptides indicate that stability of the SB form relative to the SCS form generally increases with increasing gas-phase basicity of the N-terminal amino acid, but only ArgArg x H(+) is calculated to have a SB ground state at 298 K, in agreement with the results from IRMPD spectroscopy. This is the first direct experimental evidence for a salt-bridge structure in a gaseous protonated peptide, and ArgArg x H(+) is the smallest protonated peptide for which a SB structure has been reported. These results suggest that SB structures should be common for protonated peptides containing at least two arginine residues and may also occur for large protonated peptides or proteins with at least one arginine residue and other basic residues, such as lysine or histidine.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Free Carboxylate Stretching Modes

Jos Oomens; Jeffrey D. Steill

We report the first IR spectroscopic observation of carboxylate stretching modes in free space, i.e., in the complete absence of solvent or counterions. Gas-phase spectra of a series of benzoate anions have been recorded and compared to condensed-phase spectra, revealing the profound influence of the environment on the symmetric and antisymmetric carboxylate stretch modes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Chirality-Induced Conformational Preferences in Peptide-Metal Ion Binding Revealed by IR Spectroscopy

Robert C. Dunbar; Jeffrey D. Steill; Jos Oomens

Chirality reversal of a residue in a peptide can change its mode of binding to a metal ion, as shown here experimentally by gas-phase IR spectroscopy of peptide-metal ion complexes. The binding conformations of Li(+), Na(+), and H(+) with the LL and DL stereoisomers of PhePhe were compared through IR ion spectroscopy using the FELIX free-electron laser. For the DL isomer, both Li(+) and Na(+) exclusively coordinate to the amide O atom, the carboxyl O atom, and one of the aromatic rings (the OOR conformation), while for the LL isomer, a mixture of the OOR and NOR conformations was found. The stereochemically induced change in conformation is shown to reflect the strength of an NH···π interaction remote from the metal ion site. Protonated PhePhe shows no stereochemically induced variation in binding geometry.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Emergence of Symmetry and Chirality in Crown Ether Complexes with Alkali Metal Cations

Bruno Martínez-Haya; Paola Hurtado; Ana R. Hortal; Said Hamad; Jeffrey D. Steill; Jos Oomens

Crown ethers provide a valuable benchmark for the comprehension of molecular recognition mediated by inclusion complexes. One of the most relevant crown ethers, 18-crown-6 (18c6), features a flexible six-oxygen cyclic backbone that is well-known for its selective cation binding. This study employs infrared spectroscopy and quantum mechanical calculations to elucidate the structure of the gas-phase complexes formed by the 18c6 ether with the alkali metal cations. It is shown that symmetric and chiral arrangements play a dominant role in the conformational landscape of the 18c6-alkali system. Most stable 18c6-M(+) conformers are found to have symmetries C(3v) and C(2) for Cs(+), D(3d) for K(+), C(1) and D(3d) for Na(+), and D(2) for Li(+). Remarkably, whereas the bare 18c6 ether is achiral, chirality emerges in the C(2) and D(2) 18c6-M(+) conformations, both of which involve pairs of stable atropoisomers capable of acting as enantiomeric selective substrates.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Conformation Switching in Gas-Phase Complexes of Histidine with Alkaline Earth Ions

Robert C. Dunbar; Alan C. Hopkinson; Jos Oomens; Chi-Kit Siu; K. W. Michael Siu; Jeffrey D. Steill; Udo H. Verkerk; Junfang Zhao

Infrared multiple photon dissociation spectroscopy of gas-phase doubly charged alkaline earth complexes of histidine reveals a transition from dominance of the zwitterion (salt bridge, SB) conformation with Ba2+ to substantial presence of the canonical (charge-solvated, CS) conformation with Ca2+. This result is a clear illustration of the importance of metal-ion size in governing the delicate balance between these two modes of complexation of gas-phase amino acids. The two conformational motifs are clearly distinguished by characteristic spectral features, confirmed by density functional theory simulated IR spectra of the low-energy conformers. As a further illustration of histidine complexation possibilities, the spectrum of the Na+His complex shows purely CS character and emphasizes the greater tendency toward SB character induced by the higher charge in the alkaline earth complexes. Calculation of the complete series of alkaline earth/histidine complexes confirms the increasing stability of the SB conformations relative to CS with increasing metal ion size, as well as showing that among SB conformations the most highly chelated conformation (SB3) is favored for small metals, whereas the most extended conformation (SB1) is favored for large metals. A decomposition of the binding thermochemistry shows that these thermochemical trends versus metal-ion size are due to differences in electrostatic binding energies, with relatively little contribution from the deformation and rearrangement energy costs of distorting the ligand framework.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Peptide length, steric effects, and ion solvation govern zwitterion stabilization in barium-chelated di- and tripeptides

Robert C. Dunbar; Jeffrey D. Steill; Nick C. Polfer; Jos Oomens

Infrared multiple-photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy has given infrared spectra of complexes of di- and tripeptides (AlaAla, AlaAlaAla, AlaPhe, PheAla) with singly and doubly charged metal ions (K(+), Ca(2+), Sr(2+), and Ba(2+)). The switch between charge-solvated (CS) and salt-bridged zwitterion (SB) conformations is displayed through highly diagnostic features in the mid-infrared. Systematic trends are found correlating with the length of the peptide chain (tripeptides favoring CS conformations), metal ion size (larger metals favoring SB conformations), metal ion charge (doubly charged ions favoring SB conformations), and sterically available Lewis-basic side-chain interactions with the metal ion (for example a cation-pi interaction with Ba(2+) stabilizes CS for PheAla but not for AlaPhe). The principle is that CS conformations are favored for small metal ions with high charge density and extensive microsolvation of the charge by Lewis-basic groups, especially amide carbonyls; SB conformations are favored by metal ions of high charge but low charge density, which are better stabilized by salt-bridge Coulomb interactions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2009

Infrared Multiple Photon Dissociation Spectroscopy of Cationized Asparagine: Effects of Metal Cation Size on Gas-Phase Conformation

A. L. Heaton; V. N. Bowman; Jos Oomens; Jeffrey D. Steill

The gas phase structures of cationized histidine (His), including complexes with Li(+), Na(+), K(+), Rb(+), and Cs(+), are examined by infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) action spectroscopy utilizing light generated by a free electron laser, in conjunction with quantum chemical calculations. To identify the structures present in the experimental studies, measured IRMPD spectra are compared to spectra calculated at B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) (Li(+), Na(+), and K(+) complexes) and B3LYP/HW*/6-311+G(d,p) (Rb(+) and Cs(+) complexes) levels of theory, where HW* indicates that the Hay-Wadt effective core potential with additional polarization functions was used on the metals. Single point energy calculations were carried out at the B3LYP, B3P86, and MP2(full) levels using the 6-311+G(2d,2p) basis set. On the basis of these experiments and calculations, the only conformation that reproduces the IRMPD action spectra for the complexes of the smaller alkali metal cations, Li(+)(His) and Na(+)(His), is a charge-solvated, tridentate structure where the metal cation binds to the backbone carbonyl oxygen, backbone amino nitrogen, and nitrogen atom of the imidazole side chain, [CO,N(α),N(1)], in agreement with the predicted ground states of these complexes. Spectra of the larger alkali metal cation complexes, K(+)(His), Rb(+)(His), and Cs(+)(His), have very similar spectral features that are considerably more complex than the IRMPD spectra of Li(+)(His) and Na(+)(His). For these complexes, the bidentate [CO,N(1)] conformer in which the metal cation binds to the backbone carbonyl oxygen and nitrogen atom of the imidazole side chain is a dominant contributor, although features associated with the tridentate [CO,N(α),N(1)] conformer remain, and those for the [COOH] conformer are also clearly present. Theoretical results for Rb(+)(His) and Cs(+)(His) indicate that both [CO,N(1)] and [COOH] conformers are low-energy structures, with different levels of theory predicting different ground conformers.

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Jos Oomens

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Robert C. Dunbar

Case Western Reserve University

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Ryan P. Dain

Wichita State University

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Giel Berden

University of Amsterdam

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Jeffrey J. Kay

Sandia National Laboratories

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