Electrochemical titrations and reaction time courses monitored in situ by magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy

July 28, 2017

Title

Electrochemical titrations and reaction time courses monitored in situ by magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy

Author

Justin M. Bradley, Julea N. Butt, Myles R. Cheesman

Year

2011

Journal

Analytical Biochemistry

Abstract

Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra, at ultraviolet–visible or near-infrared wavelengths (185–2000 nm), contain the same transitions observed in conventional absorbance spectroscopy, but their bisignate nature and more stringent selection rules provide greatly enhanced resolution. Thus, they have proved to be invaluable in the study of many transition metal-containing proteins. For mainly technical reasons, MCD has been limited almost exclusively to the measurement of static samples. But the ability to employ the resolving power of MCD to follow changes at transition metal sites would be a potentially significant advance. We describe here the development of a cuvette holder that allows reagent injection and sample mixing within the 50-mm-diameter ambient temperature bore of an energized superconducting solenoid. This has allowed us, for the first time, to monitor time-resolved MCD resulting from in situ chemical manipulation of a metalloprotein sample. Furthermore, we report the parallel development of an electrochemical cell using a three-electrode configuration with physically separated working and counter electrodes, allowing true potentiometric titration to be performed within the bore of the MCD solenoid.

Instrument

J-810

Keywords

Magnetic circular dichroism, Coordination chemistry, Biochemistry