Cryophotolysis of a caged oxygen compound for use in low temperature biological studies
Author(s) -
Annaleise R. HowardJones,
Virgile Adam,
A.R. Cowley,
Jack E. Baldwin,
Dominique Bourgeois
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
photochemical and photobiological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.699
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1474-9092
pISSN - 1474-905X
DOI - 10.1039/b821516b
Subject(s) - oxygen , chemistry , photochemistry , catalysis , molecule , molecular oxygen , cobalt , absorption (acoustics) , combinatorial chemistry , inorganic chemistry , organic chemistry , materials science , composite material
Mechanistic investigations of biological enzymatic processes require controlled initiation and monitoring of catalytic reactions. A well-known technique to trap and observe reaction intermediates building up along a reaction pathway is the use of low temperature conditions. Here, we report a kinetically competent system for the release of molecular oxygen at cryogenic temperature, using a cobalt-based caged oxygen molecule, (micro-peroxo)(micro-hydroxo)bis[bis(bipyridyl)cobalt(III)] nitrate. Cryophotolysis of this compound was induced using 266 nm laser light and monitored by absorption microspectrophotometry. Furthermore, to verify that photo-fragmentation was accompanied by release of the active caged molecule, the production of dioxygen during cryophotolysis was directly visualized. This work lays the foundations for the use of low temperature reaction triggering as a tool to prolong the lifetime of normally unstable intermediate states in oxygen-dependent enzymes.
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