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Description
Increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will inevitably lead to long-term changes in climate that can have serious consequences. Controlling anthropogenic emission of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, however, represents a significant technological challenge. Various chemical approaches have been suggested, perhaps the most promising of these is based

Increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will inevitably lead to long-term changes in climate that can have serious consequences. Controlling anthropogenic emission of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, however, represents a significant technological challenge. Various chemical approaches have been suggested, perhaps the most promising of these is based on electrochemical trapping of carbon dioxide using pyridine and derivatives. Optimization of this process requires a detailed understanding of the mechanisms of the reactions of reduced pyridines with carbon dioxide, which are not currently well known. This thesis describes a detailed mechanistic study of the nucleophilic and Bronsted basic properties of the radical anion of bipyridine as a model pyridine derivative, formed by one-electron reduction, with particular emphasis on the reactions with carbon dioxide. A time-resolved spectroscopic method was used to characterize the key intermediates and determine the kinetics of the reactions of the radical anion and its protonated radical form. Using a pulsed nanosecond laser, the bipyridine radical anion could be generated in-situ in less than 100 ns, which allows fast reactions to be monitored in real time. The bipyridine radical anion was found to be a very powerful one-electron donor, Bronsted base and nucleophile. It reacts by addition to the C=O bonds of ketones with a bimolecular rate constant around 1* 107 M-1 s-1. These are among the fastest nucleophilic additions that have been reported in literature. Temperature dependence studies demonstrate very low activation energies and large Arrhenius pre-exponential parameters, consistent with very high reactivity. The kinetics of E2 elimination, where the radical anion acts as a base, and SN2 substitution, where the radical anion acts as a nucleophile, are also characterized by large bimolecular rate constants in the range ca. 106 - 107 M-1 s-1. The pKa of the bipyridine radical anion was measured using a kinetic method and analysis of the data using a Marcus theory model for proton transfer. The bipyridine radical anion is found to have a pKa of 40±5 in DMSO. The reorganization energy for the proton transfer reaction was found to be 70±5 kJ/mol. The bipyridine radical anion was found to react very rapidly with carbon dioxide, with a bimolecular rate constant of 1* 108 M-1 s-1 and a small activation energy, whereas the protonated radical reacted with carbon dioxide with a rate constant that was too small to measure. The kinetic and thermodynamic data obtained in this work can be used to understand the mechanisms of the reactions of pyridines with carbon dioxide under reducing conditions.
ContributorsRanjan, Rajeev (Author) / Gould, Ian R (Thesis advisor) / Buttry, Daniel A (Thesis advisor) / Yarger, Jeff (Committee member) / Seo, Dong-Kyun (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Understanding glycosaminoglycans’ (GAG) interaction with proteins is of growing interest for therapeutic applications. For instance, heparin is a GAG exploited for its ability to inhibit proteases, therefore inducing anticoagulation. For this reason, heparin is extracted in mass quantities from porcine intestine in the pharmaceutical field. Following a contamination in 2008,

Understanding glycosaminoglycans’ (GAG) interaction with proteins is of growing interest for therapeutic applications. For instance, heparin is a GAG exploited for its ability to inhibit proteases, therefore inducing anticoagulation. For this reason, heparin is extracted in mass quantities from porcine intestine in the pharmaceutical field. Following a contamination in 2008, alternative sources for heparin are desired. In response, much research has been invested in the extraction of the naturally occurring polysaccharide, heparosan, from Escherichia coli K5 strain. As heparosan contains the same structural backbone as heparin, modifications can be made to produce heparin or heparin-like molecules from this source. Furthermore, isotopically labeled batches of heparosan can be produced to aid in protein-GAG interaction studies. In this study, a comparative look between extraction and purification methods of heparosan was taken. Fed-batch fermentation of this E. coli strain followed by subsequent purification yielded a final 13C/15N labeled batch of 90mg/L of heparosan which was then N-sulfated. Furthermore, a labeled sulfated disaccharide from this batch was utilized in a protein interaction study with CCL5. With NMR analysis, it was found that this heparin-like molecule interacted with CCL5 when its glucosamine residue was in a β-conformation. This represents an interaction reliant on a specific anomericity of this GAG molecule.
ContributorsHoffman, Kristin Michelle (Author) / Wang, Xu (Thesis director) / Cabirac, Gary (Committee member) / Morgan, Ashli (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2015-05
Description
Microwave hydrolysis of egg-white lysozyme was optimized using 1H liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy experiments for amino acid analysis (AAA). Time held under microwave hydrolysis was arrayed for 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 15 minutes. Correlations from gCOSY 2D NMR experiments combined with 1H assignments in the one-dimensional

Microwave hydrolysis of egg-white lysozyme was optimized using 1H liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy experiments for amino acid analysis (AAA). Time held under microwave hydrolysis was arrayed for 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 15 minutes. Correlations from gCOSY 2D NMR experiments combined with 1H assignments in the one-dimensional chemical shift spectra identified 18 of the 20 amino acids found in lysozyme. Comparison with Uniprot database amino acid composition values revealed the optimal microwave hydrolysis time lies between 4 and 6 minutes. Identification of lysozyme was confirmed with the ExPASy online database search tool AACompIdent. The microwave hydrolysis procedure presented is a simple analytical technique allowing quick and reliable sample preparation in less than one hour that requires no separation or derivation of amino acids residues prior to detection.
ContributorsEdwards, Maximillian Ashur (Author) / Yarger, Jeff (Thesis director) / Marzke, Robert (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences (Contributor) / Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry (Contributor)
Created2015-05
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Description
Glycosaminoglycan (GAG) binding by the cytokine pleiotrophin (PTN) was examined by expressing both thrombospondin 1 type-1 repeat domains of PTN separately, as PTN-N and PTN-C. PTN-N contains residues 31-89, and PTN-C contains residues 90-146. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments were conducted on both PTN-N and PTN-C to elucidate GAG binding

Glycosaminoglycan (GAG) binding by the cytokine pleiotrophin (PTN) was examined by expressing both thrombospondin 1 type-1 repeat domains of PTN separately, as PTN-N and PTN-C. PTN-N contains residues 31-89, and PTN-C contains residues 90-146. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments were conducted on both PTN-N and PTN-C to elucidate GAG binding regions. Titration with heparin dp6 showed a twofold increase in affinity when expressing PTN-N and PTN-C separately rather than as intact PTN. Paramagnetic relaxation rate enhancement experiments and surface paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) perturbation experiments were used to determine which residues were involved in GAG binding. One binding site was observed in PTN-N, around residue T82, and two binding sites were observed in PTN-C, one around residue K93 and the other around residue G142. These observed binding sites agree with the binding sites already proposed by the Wang lab group and other studies. Future work on the subject could be done on confirming that other varieties and length GAGs bind at the same sites, as well as examining the effect longer GAG fragments have on the affinity of intact PTN versus separate domains.
ContributorsKuch, Nathaniel Jacob (Author) / Wang, Xu (Thesis director) / Van Horn, Wade (Committee member) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2015-12