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Dive into the research topics where Martin C. Feiters is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin C. Feiters.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Iodide accumulation provides kelp with an inorganic antioxidant impacting atmospheric chemistry

Frithjof C. Küpper; Lucy J. Carpenter; Gordon McFiggans; Carl J. Palmer; Tim J. Waite; Eva-Maria Boneberg; Sonja Woitsch; Markus Weiller; Rafael Abela; Daniel Grolimund; Philippe Potin; Alison Butler; George W. Luther; Peter M. H. Kroneck; Wolfram Meyer-Klaucke; Martin C. Feiters

Brown algae of the Laminariales (kelps) are the strongest accumulators of iodine among living organisms. They represent a major pump in the global biogeochemical cycle of iodine and, in particular, the major source of iodocarbons in the coastal atmosphere. Nevertheless, the chemical state and biological significance of accumulated iodine have remained unknown to this date. Using x-ray absorption spectroscopy, we show that the accumulated form is iodide, which readily scavenges a variety of reactive oxygen species (ROS). We propose here that its biological role is that of an inorganic antioxidant, the first to be described in a living system. Upon oxidative stress, iodide is effluxed. On the thallus surface and in the apoplast, iodide detoxifies both aqueous oxidants and ozone, the latter resulting in the release of high levels of molecular iodine and the consequent formation of hygroscopic iodine oxides leading to particles, which are precursors to cloud condensation nuclei. In a complementary set of experiments using a heterologous system, iodide was found to effectively scavenge ROS in human blood cells.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

Commemorating two centuries of iodine research: An interdisciplinary overview of current research

Frithjof C. Küpper; Martin C. Feiters; Berit Olofsson; Tatsuo Kaiho; Shozo Yanagida; Michael B. Zimmermann; Lucy J. Carpenter; George W. Luther; Zunli Lu; Mats Jonsson; Lars Kloo

Iodine was discovered as a novel element in 1811 during the Napoleonic Wars. To celebrate the bicentennial anniversary of this event we reflect on the history and highlight the many facets of iodine research that have evolved since its discovery. Iodine has an impact on many aspects of life on Earth as well as on human civilization. It is accumulated in high concentrations by marine algae, which are the origin of strong iodine fluxes into the coastal atmosphere which influence climatic processes, and dissolved iodine is considered a biophilic element in marine sediments. Iodine is central to thyroid function in vertebrates, with paramount implications for human health. Iodine can exist in a wide range of oxidation states and it features a diverse supramolecular chemistry. Iodine is amenable to several analytical techniques, and iodine compounds have found widespread use in organic synthesis. Elemental iodine is produced on an industrial scale and has found a wide range of applications in innovative materials, including semiconductors--in particular, in solar cells.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

Green and blue electrochemically generated chemiluminescence from click chemistry-customizable iridium complexes

Simone Zanarini; Marco Felici; Giovanni Valenti; Massimo Marcaccio; Luca Prodi; Sara Bonacchi; P. Contreras-Carballada; René M. Williams; Martin C. Feiters; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Luisa De Cola; Francesco Paolucci

Cationic cyclometalated iridium complexes containing two anionic phenylpyridine (ppy) ligands and the neutral bidentate triazole-pyridine ligand, 2-(1-substituted-1H-1,2,3-triazol-4-yl)pyridine (pytl), were investigated. The complexes display a rich and reversible electrochemical behavior, upon investigations by cyclic voltammetry in strictly aprotic conditions, that couples with excellent emission quantum yields and long lifetimes of the excited states. Therefore, in organic media, all complexes have generated intense green electrochemiluminescence (ECL) through the so-called annihilation procedure and, importantly, a modulation of the emission energy (to blue) has been easily obtained by simple fluorination of the ppy ligand. Finally, taking advantage of their remarkable solubility in water, intense ECL was also obtained from aqueous buffer solutions using the co-reactant method, thus making all the investigated complexes highly promising for their effective use as ECL labels in bioanalytical applications.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

β-Cyclodextrin-Appended Giant Amphiphile: Aggregation to Vesicle Polymersomes and Immobilisation of Enzymes

Marco Felici; María Marzá‐Pérez; Nikos S. Hatzakis; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Martin C. Feiters

A giant amphiphile consisting of polystyrene end-capped with permethylated beta-cyclodextrin was synthesised and found to form vesicular structures when injected as a solution in THF into water. The ability of the cyclodextrins on the surface of the polymersomes to form inclusion complexes with hydrophobic compounds was tested by carrying out a competition experiment with a fluorescent probe sensitive to the polarity of the surrounding medium. It was found that 1-adamantol can displace the fluorescent probe from the cavities of the cyclodextrin moieties of the polymersomes. The recognition of molecules by cell membranes in nature is often based on interactions with specific membrane receptors. To mimic this behaviour, the enzyme horseradish peroxidase was modified with adamantane groups through a poly(ethylene glycol) spacer and its interaction with the polymersomes was investigated. It was established that the presence of adamantane moieties on each enzyme allowed a host-guest interaction with the multifunctional surface of the polymersomes.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Quantitative Trace Analysis of Complex Mixtures Using SABRE Hyperpolarization

Nan Eshuis; Bram J. A. van Weerdenburg; Martin C. Feiters; Floris P. J. T. Rutjes; Sybren S. Wijmenga; Marco Tessari

Signal amplification by reversible exchange (SABRE) is an emerging nuclear spin hyperpolarization technique that strongly enhances NMR signals of small molecules in solution. However, such signal enhancements have never been exploited for concentration determination, as the efficiency of SABRE can strongly vary between different substrates or even between nuclear spins in the same molecule. The first application of SABRE for the quantitative analysis of a complex mixture is now reported. Despite the inherent complexity of the system under investigation, which involves thousands of competing binding equilibria, analytes at concentrations in the low micromolar range could be quantified from single-scan SABRE spectra using a standard-addition approach.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2005

X-ray absorption spectroscopic studies on model compounds for biological iodine and bromine

Martin C. Feiters; Frithjof C. Küpper; Wolfram Meyer-Klaucke

X-ray absorption spectra of a number of organic iodine and bromine compounds of biological relevance, as well as of a series of iodine compounds with different oxidation states, have been measured. The iodine K-edge spectra (XANES) are found to be relatively featureless but the position of the edge is found to be sensitive to formal valence (among other factors), and the edge shape to the number of bound O atoms. EXAFS spectra of organohalogen compounds (both iodine and bromine) can be used to discriminate between aliphatic and aromatic compounds. There are differences both in the distances from the halogens to the first shell of C atoms, which are shorter for aromatic compounds, and in the patterns of shells in the Fourier transforms. This result is expected to be relevant to studies at these edges in biological systems.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

2D NMR Trace Analysis by Continuous Hyperpolarization at High Magnetic Field

Nan Eshuis; Ruud L. E. G. Aspers; Bram J. A. van Weerdenburg; Martin C. Feiters; Floris P. J. T. Rutjes; Sybren S. Wijmenga; Marco Tessari

Nuclear magnetic resonance is often the technique of choice in chemical analysis because of its sensitivity to molecular structure, quantitative character, and straightforward sample preparation. However, determination of trace analytes in complex mixtures is generally limited by low sensitivity and extensive signal overlap. Here, we present an approach for continuous hyperpolarization at high magnetic field that is based on signal amplification by reversible exchange (SABRE) and can be straightforwardly incorporated in multidimensional NMR experiments. This method was implemented in a 2D correlation experiment that allows detection and quantification of analytes at nanomolar concentration in complex solutions.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

A New Ir-NHC Catalyst for Signal Amplification by Reversible Exchange in D2O

Peter Spannring; Indrek Reile; Meike Emondts; P. Philipp M. Schleker; Niels K.J. Hermkens; Nick van der Zwaluw; Bram J. A. van Weerdenburg; Paul Tinnemans; Marco Tessari; Bernhard Blümich; Floris P. J. T. Rutjes; Martin C. Feiters

Abstract NMR signal amplification by reversible exchange (SABRE) has been observed for pyridine, methyl nicotinate, N‐methylnicotinamide, and nicotinamide in D2O with the new catalyst [Ir(Cl)(IDEG)(COD)] (IDEG=1,3‐bis(3,4,5‐tris(diethyleneglycol)benzyl)imidazole‐2‐ylidene). During the activation and hyperpolarization steps, exclusively D2O was used, resulting in the first fully biocompatible SABRE system. Hyperpolarized 1H substrate signals were observed at 42.5 MHz upon pressurizing the solution with parahydrogen at close to the Earths magnetic field, at concentrations yielding barely detectable thermal signals. Moreover, 42‐, 26‐, 22‐, and 9‐fold enhancements were observed for nicotinamide, pyridine, methyl nicotinate, and N‐methylnicotinamide, respectively, in conventional 300 MHz studies. This research opens up new opportunities in a field in which SABRE has hitherto primarily been conducted in CD3OD. This system uses simple hardware, leaves the substrate unaltered, and shows that SABRE is potentially suitable for clinical purposes.


Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Distorted octahedral coordination of tungstate in a subfamily of specific binding proteins

Kaspar Hollenstein; Mireia Comellas-Bigler; Loes E. Bevers; Martin C. Feiters; Wolfram Meyer-Klaucke; Peter-Leon Hagedoorn; Kaspar P. Locher

Bacteria and archaea import molybdenum and tungsten from the environment in the form of the oxyanions molybdate (MoO42−) and tungstate (WO42−). These substrates are captured by an external, high-affinity binding protein, and delivered to ATP binding cassette transporters, which move them across the cell membrane. We have recently reported a crystal structure of the molybdate/tungstate binding protein ModA/WtpA from Archaeoglobus fulgidus, which revealed an octahedrally coordinated central metal atom. By contrast, the previously determined structures of three bacterial homologs showed tetracoordinate molybdenum and tungsten atoms in their binding pockets. Until then, coordination numbers above four had only been found for molybdenum/tungsten in metalloenzymes where these metal atoms are part of the catalytic cofactors and coordinated by mostly non-oxygen ligands. We now report a high-resolution structure of A. fulgidus ModA/WtpA, as well as crystal structures of four additional homologs, all bound to tungstate. These crystal structures match X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements from soluble, tungstate-bound protein, and reveal the details of the distorted octahedral coordination. Our results demonstrate that the distorted octahedral geometry is not an exclusive feature of the A. fulgidus protein, and suggest distinct binding modes of the binding proteins from archaea and bacteria.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2013

In vivo speciation studies and antioxidant properties of bromine in Laminaria digitata reinforce the significance of iodine accumulation for kelps

Frithjof C. Küpper; Lucy J. Carpenter; Catherine Leblanc; Chiaki Toyama; Yuka Uchida; Benjamin H. Maskrey; Joanne Robinson; Elodie Verhaeghe; Gill Malin; George W. Luther; Peter M. H. Kroneck; Bernard Kloareg; Wolfram Meyer-Klaucke; Yasuyuki Muramatsu; Ian L. Megson; Philippe Potin; Martin C. Feiters

The metabolism of bromine in marine brown algae remains poorly understood. This contrasts with the recent finding that the accumulation of iodide in the brown alga Laminaria serves the provision of an inorganic antioxidant – the first case documented from a living system. The aim of this study was to use an interdisciplinary array of techniques to study the chemical speciation, transformation, and function of bromine in Laminaria and to investigate the link between bromine and iodine metabolism, in particular in the antioxidant context. First, bromine and iodine levels in different Laminaria tissues were compared by inductively coupled plasma MS. Using in vivo X-ray absorption spectroscopy, it was found that, similarly to iodine, bromine is predominantly present in this alga in the form of bromide, albeit at lower concentrations, and that it shows similar behaviour upon oxidative stress. However, from a thermodynamic and kinetic standpoint, supported by in vitro and reconstituted in vivo assays, bromide is less suitable than iodide as an antioxidant against most reactive oxygen species except superoxide, possibly explaining why kelps prefer to accumulate iodide. This constitutes the first-ever study exploring the potential antioxidant function of bromide in a living system and other potential physiological roles. Given the tissue-specific differences observed in the content and speciation of bromine, it is concluded that the bromide uptake mechanism is different from the vanadium iodoperoxidase-mediated uptake of iodide in L. digitata and that its function is likely to be complementary to the iodide antioxidant system for detoxifying superoxide.

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Marco Tessari

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Nan Eshuis

Radboud University Nijmegen

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A. V. Soldatov

Southern Federal University

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Sybren S. Wijmenga

Radboud University Nijmegen

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