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Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Solution [Cu(amm)]2+ is a Strongly Solvated Square Pyramid: A Full Account of the Copper K-edge XAS Spectrum Within Single-Electron Theory

Patrick Frank; M. Benfatto; Britt Hedman; Keith O. Hodgson

The solution structure of Cu(II) in 4 M aqueous ammonia, [Cu(amm)](2+), was assessed using copper K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and Minuit XANes (MXAN) analyses. Tested structures included trigonal planar, planar and D2d -tetragonal, regular and distorted square pyramids, trigonal bipyramids, and Jahn-Teller distorted octahedra. Each approach converged to the same axially elongated square pyramid, 4 x Cu-Neq=2.00+/-0.02 A and 1 x Cu-Nax=2.16+/-0.02 A (EXAFS) or 2.20+/-0.07 A (MXAN), with strongly localized solvation shells. In the MXAN model, four equatorial ammonias averaged 13 degrees below the Cu(II) xy-plane, which was 0.45+/-0.1 A above the mean N4 plane. When the axial ligand equilibrium partial occupancies of about 0.65 ammonia and 0.35 water were included, EXAFS modeling found Cu-Lax distances of 2.16 and 2.31 A, respectively, reproducing the distances found in the crystal structures of [Cu(NH3)5](2+) and [Cu(NH3)4(H2O)](2+). A transverse axially localized solvent molecule was found at 2.8 A (EXAFS) or 3.1 A (MXAN). Six second-shell solvent molecules were also found at about 3.4+/-0.01 (EXAFS) or 3.8+/-0.2 A (MXAN). The structure of Cu(II) in 4 M pH 10 aqueous NH 3 may be notationally described as {[Cu(NH 3)4.62(H2O)0.38](solv)}(2+).6solv, solv=H2O, NH 3. The prominent shoulder and duplexed maximum of the rising K-edge XAS of [Cu(amm)](2+) primarily reflect the durable and well-organized solvation shells, not found around [Cu(H2O)5](2+), rather than two-electron shakedown transitions. Not accounting for solvent scattering thus may confound XAS-based estimates of metal-ligand covalency. [Cu(amm)](2+) continues the dissymmetry previously found for the solution structure of [Cu(H2O)5](2+), again contradicting the rack-bonding theory of blue copper proteins.


Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2003

Medium-dependence of vanadium K-edge X-ray absorption spectra with application to blood cells from phlebobranch tunicates

Patrick Frank; Robert M. K. Carlson; Elaine J. Carlson; Keith O. Hodgson

Abstract K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) is a subtle probe of the chemical environment and oxidation state of the elements. Thus, the change in the energy position of the rising K-edge inflection in the XAS spectrum of [V(H2O)6]3+ in pH 0, 1, 2 and 3 aqueous solutions produces a titration curve that can be fit (r=0.999) with an unusual model involving two cooperative deprotonations, yielding pKa1=1.5±0.1 and pKa2=1.1±0.1. These pH effects on VIII K-edge XAS spectra vary with the medium (40% aqueous methanol) and the counterion (Cl−, SO42−). Applied to whole blood of the tunicate Ascidia ceratodes, as collected from Monterey Bay, California, fits to the vanadium K-edge XAS spectra produced a detailed speciation of the major endogenous cellular VIII (complex, percent): [V(H2O)6]3+, 23.6%; [V(SO4)(H2O)5]+, 38.1%; [V(SO4)2(H2O)4]−, 19.8%, and; [V(SO4)(OH)2(H2O)3], 7.7%. Genus-associated differences in the distribution of blood cell vanadium appear on comparison with a sample of whole blood from Phallusia nigra, in which most of the vanadium is distributed among [V(H2O)6]3+, 34%; tris-chelated VIII, 33%, and; [VIVO(H2O)5]2+, 30%, with no VIII complex ions at all detected. Vanadium distribution in the blood cells of a single specimen of A. ceratodes from Bodega Bay, California is shown to vary significantly from the norm of animals collected from Monterey Bay, California. Finally, preliminary results are reported from in vitro experiments exposing A. ceratodes blood cells to vanadyl ion, showing active uptake and incorporation.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1986

Sulfur K-edge X-ray absorption studies using the 54-pole wiggler at SSRL in undulator mode

Britt Hedman; Patrick Frank; James E. Penner-Hahn; A.Lawrence Roe; Keith O. Hodgson; Robert M. K. Carlson; George Brown; J. Cerino; Robert Hettel; Teresa Troxel; Herman Winick; J. Yang

Abstract A series of experiments have been conducted to further characterize and utilize the 54-pole wiggler at SSRL in undulator mode. The magnetic field was varied between 1.45 and 5.0 kG. Below 2.0 kG the two graphite heat absorbing filters in the beam line could be safely removed, providing high flux and brightness in the 2.3–3 keV region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Spectral distribution and intensity as a function of magnetic field and methods for harmonic rejection were evaluated. With a magnetic field of 1.45 kG, i.e. adjusted to position the third harmonic of the undulator spectrum at the sulfur K edge, X-ray absorption spectra having excellent signal-to-noise ratio were recorded for a 5 mM aqueous sulfate solution, for intact living vanadocyte blood cells, and for the protein ferredoxin. These results clearly demonstrate the significant new experimental opportunities provided by the undulator in the aquisition of data otherwise difficult to obtain, such as e.g. sulfur K edge X-ray absorption spectra of dilute solutions and biological substances.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2008

The Uptake and Fate of Vanadyl Ion in Ascidian Blood Cells and A Detailed Hypothesis for the Mechanism and Location of Biological Vanadium Reduction: A Visible and X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopic Study

Patrick Frank; Elaine J. Carlson; Robert M. K. Carlson; Britt Hedman; Keith O. Hodgson

Vanadium K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) has been used to track the uptake and fate of VO(2+) ion in blood cells from Ascidia ceratodes, following exposure to dithiothreitol (DTT) or to DTT plus VO(2+). The full range of endogenous vanadium was queried by fitting the XAS of blood cells with the XAS spectra of model vanadium complexes. In cells exposed only to DTT, approximately 0.4% of a new V(III) species was found in a site similar to Na[V(edta)(H(2)O)]. With exposure to DTT and VO(2+), average intracellular [VO(aq)](2+) increased from 3% to 5%, and 6% of a new complexed form of vanadyl ion appeared evidencing a ligand array similar to [VO(edta)](2-). At the same time, the relative ratio of blood cell [V(H(2)O)(6)](3+) increased at the expense of [V(H(2)O)(5)(SO(4))](+) in a manner consistent with a significant increase in endogenous acidity. In new UV/Visible experiments, VO(2+) could be reduced to 7-coordinate [V(nta)(H(2)O)(3)] or [V(nta)(ida)](2-) with cysteine methyl ester in pH 6.5 solution. Ascorbate reduced [VO(edta)](2-) to 7-coordinate [V(edta)(H(2)O)](-), while [VO(trdta)](2-) was unreactive. These results corroborate the finding that the reductive EMF of VO(2+) is increased by the availability of a 7-coordinate V(III) product. Finally, a new and complete hypothesis is proposed for an ascidian vanadate reductase. The structure of the enzyme active site, the vanadate-vanadyl-vanadic reduction mechanism, the cellular locale, and elements of the regulatory machinery governing the biological reduction of vanadate and vanadyl ion by ascidians are all predicted. Together these constitute the new field of vanadium redox enzymology.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

The X-ray Absorption Spectroscopic Model of the Copper(II) Imidazole Complex Ion in Liquid Aqueous Solution: A Strongly Solvated Square Pyramid

Patrick Frank; M. Benfatto; Britt Hedman; Keith O. Hodgson

Cu K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and Minuit X-ray absorption near-edge structure (MXAN) analyses were combined to evaluate the structure of the copper(II) imidazole complex ion in liquid aqueous solution. Both methods converged to the same square-pyramidal inner coordination sphere [Cu(Im)(4)L(ax)](2+) (L(ax) indeterminate) with four equatorial nitrogen atoms at EXAFS, 2.02 ± 0.01 Å, and MXAN, 1.99 ± 0.03 Å. A short-axial N/O scatterer (L(ax)) was found at 2.12 ± 0.02 Å (EXAFS) or 2.14 ± 0.06 Å (MXAN). A second but very weak axial Cu-N/O interaction was found at 2.9 ± 0.1 Å (EXAFS) or 3.0 ± 0.1 Å (MXAN). In the MXAN fits, only a square-pyramidal structural model successfully reproduced the doubled maximum of the rising K-edge X-ray absorption spectrum, specifically excluding an octahedral model. Both EXAFS and MXAN also found eight outlying oxygen scatterers at 4.2 ± 0.3 Å that contributed significant intensity over the entire spectral energy range. Two prominent rising K-edge shoulders at 8987.1 and 8990.5 eV were found to reflect multiple scattering from the 3.0 Å axial scatterer and the imidazole rings, respectively. In the MXAN fits, the imidazole rings took in-plane rotationally staggered positions about copper. The combined (EXAFS and MXAN) model for the unconstrained cupric imidazole complex ion in liquid aqueous solution is an axially elongated square-pyramidal core, with a weak nonbonded interaction at the second axial coordination position and a solvation shell of eight nearest-neighbor water molecules. This core square-pyramidal motif has persisted through [Cu(H(2)O)(5)](2+), [Cu(NH(3))(4)(NH(3),H(2)O)](2+), (1, 2) and now [Cu(Im)(4)L(ax))](2+) and appears to be the geometry preferred by unconstrained aqueous-phase copper(II) complex ions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Vanadium K-edge X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy Reveals Species Differences within the Same Ascidian Genera A COMPARISON OF WHOLE BLOOD FROM ASCIDIA NIGRA ANDASCIDIA CERATODES

Patrick Frank; Keith O. Hodgson; Kenneth Kustin; William E. Robinson

Vanadium K-edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) was used to examine whole blood preparations from the tunicatesAscidia nigra and Ascidia ceratodes. Each XAS spectrum exhibits a rising edge inflection near 5480 eV characteristic of vanadium(III) and an intensity maximum at 5484.0 eV. In A. ceratodes blood cells, intrinsic aquo-VSO4 + complex ion is indicated by an inflection feature at 5476 eV in the first derivative of the vanadium K-edge XAS spectrum, but this feature is notably absent from the first derivative of the vanadium K-edge spectrum of blood cells from A. nigra. A strong pre-edge feature at 5468.6 eV also uniquely distinguishes the vanadium K-edge XAS spectrum of A. nigra blood cells, implying that vanadyl ion represents ∼25% of the endogenous vanadium. However, the energy position of the rising edge inflection of the vanadium K-edge XAS spectrum of A. nigra (5479.5 eV) is 1 eV lower than that of A. ceratodes (5480.5 eV), the reverse of any expected shift arising from the endogenous vanadyl ion. Thus, in contrast to A. ceratodes, a significant fraction of the blood cell vanadium(III) in A. nigra is apparently in a ligation environment substantially different from that provided by water. These novel species-related differences may have taxonomic significance.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Direct Deconvolution of Two-State Pump-Probe X-ray Absorption Spectra and the Structural Changes in a 100 ps Transient of Ni(II)-tetramesitylporphyrin

Stefano Della-Longa; Lin X. Chen; Patrick Frank; Kuniko Hayakawa; Keisuke Hatada; M. Benfatto

Full multiple scattering (FMS) Minuit XANES (MXAN) has been combined with laser pump-probe K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) to determine the structure of photoexcited Ni(II)tetramesitylporphyrin, Ni(II)TMP, in dilute toluene solution. It is shown that an excellent simulation of the XANES spectrum is obtained, excluding the lowest-energy bound-state transitions. In ground-state Ni(II)TMP, the first-shell and second-shell distances are, respectively, d(Ni-N) = (1.93 +/- 0.02) A and d(Ni-C) = (2.94 +/- 0.03) A, in agreement with a previous EXAFS result. The time-resolved XANES difference spectrum was obtained (1) from the spectra of Ni(II)TMP in its photoexcited T(1) state and its ground state, S(0). The XANES difference spectrum has been analyzed to obtain both the structure and the fraction of the T(1) state. If the T(1) fraction is kept fixed at the value (0.37 +/- 0.10) determined by optical transient spectroscopy, a 0.07 A elongation of the Ni-N and Ni-C distances [d(Ni-N) and d(Ni-C)] is found, in agreement with the EXAFS result. However, an evaluation of both the distance elongation and the T(1) fraction can also be obtained using XANES data only. According to experimental evidence, and MXAN simulations, the T(1) fraction is (0.60 +/- 0.15) with d(Ni-N) = (1.98 +/- 0.03) A (0.05 A elongation). The overall uncertainty of these results depends on the statistical correlation between the distances and T(1) fraction, and the chemical shift of the ionization energy because of subtle changes of metal charge between the T(1) and S(0) states. The T(1) excited-state structure results, independently obtained without the excited-state fraction from optical transient spectroscopy, are still in agreement with previous EXAFS investigations. Thus, full multiple scattering theory applied through the MXAN formalism can be used to provide structural information, not only on the ground-state molecules but also on very short-lived excited states through differential analysis applied to transient photoexcited species from time-resolved experiments.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

A high-resolution XAS study of aqueous Cu(II) in liquid and frozen solutions: Pyramidal, polymorphic, and non-centrosymmetric

Patrick Frank; M. Benfatto; Munzarin Qayyam; Britt Hedman; Keith O. Hodgson

High-resolution EXAFS (k = 18 Å(-1)) and MXAN XAS analyses show that axially elongated square pyramidal [Cu(H2O)5](2+) dominates the structure of Cu(II) in aqueous solution, rather than 6-coordinate JT-octahedral [Cu(H2O)6](2+). Freezing produced a shoulder at 8989.6 eV on the rising XAS edge and an altered EXAFS spectrum, while 1s → 3d transitions remained invariant in energy position and intensity. Core square pyramidal [Cu(H2O)5](2+) also dominates frozen solution. Solvation shells were found at ∼3.6 Å (EXAFS) or ∼3.8 Å (MXAN) in both liquid and frozen phases. However, MXAN analysis revealed that about half the time in liquid solution, [Cu(H2O)5](2+) associates with an axially non-bonding 2.9 Å water molecule. This distant water apparently organizes the solvation shell. When the 2.9 Å water molecule is absent, the second shell is undetectable to MXAN. The two structural arrangements may represent energetic minima of fluxional dissolved aqueous [Cu(H2O)5](2+). The 2.9 Å trans-axial water resolves an apparent conflict of the [Cu(H2O)5](2+) core model with a dissociational exchange mechanism. In frozen solution, [Cu(H2O)5](2+) is associated with either a 3.0 Å axial non-bonded water molecule or an axial ClO4(-) at 3.2 Å. Both structures are again of approximately equal presence. When the axial ClO4(-) is present, Cu(II) is ∼0.5 Å above the mean O4 plane. This study establishes [Cu(H2O)5](2+) as the dominant core structure for Cu(II) in water solution, and is the first to both empirically resolve multiple extended solution structures for fluxional [Cu(H2O)5](2+) and to provide direct evidence for second shell dynamics.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2003

The vanadium environment in blood cells of Ascidia ceratodes is divergent at all organismal levels: An XAS and EPR spectroscopic study

Patrick Frank; Robert M. K. Carlson; Elaine J. Carlson; Keith O. Hodgson

K-edge X-ray absorption and EPR spectroscopies were used to test the variation in blood cell vanadium between and within specimens of the tunicate Ascidia ceratodes from Bodega Bay, California. Intracellular vanadium was speciated by fitting the XAS spectra of whole blood cells with linear combinations of the XAS spectra of models. Blood cell samples representing one specimen each, respectively, revealed 92.5 and 38.7% of endogenous vanadium as [V(H(2)O)(6)](3+), indicating dissimilar distributions. Conversely, vanadium distributions within blood cell samples respectively representing one and six specimens proved very similar. The derived array of V(III) complexes was consistent with multiple intracellular regions that differ both in pH and c(sulfate), both within and between specimens. No systematic effect on vanadium distribution was apparent on mixing blood cells. EPR and XAS results indicated at least three forms of endogenous vanadyl ion, two of which may be dimeric. An inverse linear correlation was found between soluble and complexed forms of vanadyl ion, implying co-regulation. The EPR A value of endogenous vanadyl ion [A(0)=(1.062+/-0.008)x10(-2) cm(-1)] was marginally different from that representing Monterey Bay A. ceratodes [A(0)=(1.092+/-0.006) x10(-2) cm(-1)]. Comparisons indicate that Bodega Bay A. ceratodes maintain V(III) in a more acidic intracellular environment on average than do those from Monterey Bay, showing variation across populations. Blood cell vanadium thus noticeably diverges at all organismal levels among A. ceratodes.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2001

Unprecedented Forms of Vanadium Observed within the Blood Cells of 'Phallusia nigra' Using K-edge X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy

Patrick Frank; William E. Robinson; Kenneth Kustin; Keith O. Hodgson

Fits to the vanadium K-edge X-ray absorption spectra (XAS) of five whole blood cell samples from the tunicate Phallusia nigra revealed unprecedented forms of intracellular vanadium. Endogenous vanadium was divided between the V(III) ion (74.2+/-5.1% of total V) and the vanadyl ion [V(IV)=O](2+) (25.2+/-5.4% of total V). The V(III) fraction included both [V(H(2)O)(6)](3+) (36.7+/-5.5%) modeled as VCl(3) in 1 M HCl, and three previously unprecedented chelated V(III) forms (37.5+/-4.6%). Two of these could be represented by the model ligand environments V(acetylacetonate)(3) (17.9+/-3.2%) and K(3)V(catecholate)(3) (13.1+/-4.7%), implying DOPA-like complexation. The third chelated form was represented by the 7-coordinate N(2)O(5) complex Na[V(edta)(H(2)O)] (8.0+/-1.8%). This coordination array, suggestive of a novel mononuclear V(III) protein site, contributed only to fits to samples 1, 2, 3 and 5, which were prepared in the presence of DTT. Endogenous V(IV) (25.2+/-5.4%) was principally modeled as VOCl(2) in 1 M HCl. EPR spectra (averages: A(parallel)=(1.842+/-0.006)x10(-2) cm(-1); A( perpendicular)=(0.718+/-0.007)x10(-2) cm(-1); g(parallel)=1.936+/-0.002; g( perpendicular)=1.990+/-0.001) confirmed the predominance of the aquated vanadyl ion. Blood cell sample five uniquely required the XAS spectrum of VOSO(4) in 0.1 M H(2)SO(4) solution (13.0%) and of [OV(V)(pivalate)(3)] (3.1%) to successfully fit the XAS pre-edge energy region. This endogenous V(V) signal is also unprecedented. These results are compared with those of analogous fits to the blood cells of Ascidia ceratodes and may support assignment of P. nigra to a different genus.

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Britt Hedman

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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M. Benfatto

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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W. E. Newton

Agricultural Research Service

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