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Ascorbic Acid Assisted High Performance Liquid Chromatography Mass Spectrometry Differentiation of Isomeric C-chloro- and N-chloro- Tyrosyl Peptides in Water Ping Jiang, Guang Huang, Lindsay K Jmaiff Blackstock, Jianye Zhang, and Xing-Fang Li Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b04262 • Publication Date (Web): 25 Nov 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on November 30, 2017
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Analytical Chemistry
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Ascorbic Acid Assisted High Performance Liquid Chromatography Mass Spectrometry
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Differentiation of Isomeric C-chloro- and N-chloro- Tyrosyl Peptides in Water
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Ping Jiang,† Guang Huang,† Lindsay K. Jmaiff Blackstock,† Jianye Zhang,§,† Xing-Fang Li†,*
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†
Division of Analytical and Environmental Toxicology, Department of Laboratory Medicine and
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Pathology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta Edmonton, AB Canada
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T6G 2G3
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§
College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Zhengzhou University, Henan, PR China, 450052
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Corresponding author: *Xing-Fang Li,
[email protected], 1-780-492-5094
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Abstract We report a new method of ascorbic acid assisted high performance liquid
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chromatography (HPLC) with high resolution tandem mass spectrometry (HRMS/MS) for the
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differentiation of isomeric N-chloro (N-Cl) from phenol ring C-chloro (C-Cl) peptides produced
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in chlorination of water. Using the specific reductive nature of ascorbic acid we successfully
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identified the N-Cl isomers and C-Cl isomer, overcoming the difficulties that due to lack of
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standards, these isomers cannot be separated by HPLC-HRMS. Using the new approach, we
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identified 36 new chlorinated products including mono-, di-, tri-, and tetra-Cl- tyrosyl dipeptides
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in the reaction mixture based on retention time, accurate mass, 35Cl/37Cl isotopic pattern, and
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characteristic MS/MS fragments. The method was further applied to investigate competitive
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reactions when mixed tyrosyl dipeptides were chlorinated. Tyrosyl histidine was the most
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reactive tyrosyl dipeptide in the mixture. The chlorinated products formed are identical when the
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dipeptides are chlorinated separately or as a mixture. The formation conditions and stability of
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the chlorinated products were also examined. With increasing chlorine dose, the number of
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chlorine substituents on the tyrosyl dipeptides increased from products with one/two to three/four
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Cl atoms. Most of chlorinated products are stable up to 9 days. By chlorination of tyrosyl
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dipeptides spiked into raw water, we projected that chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides can form
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during water treatment of raw water containing tyrosyl dipeptides even at low µg/L levels. This
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new method can be utilized for the discovery of a wide range of chlorinated peptide DBPs and
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the study of their formation and occurrence in water.
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Analytical Chemistry
Drinking water disinfection is essential to eliminate pathogenic microorganisms and
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prevent waterborne disease, but unintentionally generates disinfection by-products (DBPs).
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DBPs are a potential public health concern indicated by the consistent epidemiological
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association of increased bladder cancer incidence with long-term consumption of disinfected
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water.1,2 So far, over 700 carbonaceous DBPs (C-DBPs) have been identified,3-7 while only a
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small fraction, including trihalomethanes (THMs) and haloacetic acids (HAAs) have been
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regulated8,9 in drinking water. However, there is disagreement in tumor sites and potency7
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between the results from epidemiological and animal toxicological studies of regulated DBPs.
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Therefore, efforts have been made to identify and investigate DBPs of toxicological relevance.
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Nitrogenous DBPs (N-DBPs), including halonitriles, haloacetamides, and N-haloamines
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are of particular interest as they are more cyto- and genotoxic than the regulated C-DBPs.10 With
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quantitative structure toxicity relationship (QSTR) analysis, N-haloamines were predicted to
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have sufficient potency or selectivity to account for the epidemiologically associated adverse
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health effects.11 For example, endogenous N-chloramines derived from protein could enhance
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protein radical formation,12 which can further induce secondary lipid oxidation13 or DNA strand
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breaks.14 Furthermore, the presence of N-chloramines in water could be deleterious to water
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treatment efforts. For instance, N-chloramines can confound estimations of disinfectant levels in
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water treatment plants (WTPs) as they yield a similar response to chlorine during measurement.
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Compared to chlorine, N-chloramines are weaker disinfectants, thereby interfering with accurate
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estimations of pathogen deactivation and hindering disinfection efficacy.15,16 Additionally, N-
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chloramines have been found to propagate DBP formation, acting as indispensable intermediates
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for the formation of halonitriles and haloaldehydes.17 Due to the potential negative effects of N-
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haloamines on human health and water quality, research on exploring their formation and
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occurrence during water disinfection processes is of value.
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N-haloamines are generated through reactions between disinfectants and dissolved
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organic nitrogen (DON), such as amino acids, peptides, and proteins present in source water.
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Many studies have reported N-haloamine formation from reactions between HClO or NaClO
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with various amino acids.18-22 However, individual amino acids are both structurally less
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complex and far less abundant11,12 in source waters compared to combined amino acids (i.e.,
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peptides). Recently, our group used a non-targeted strategy to identify more than 600 peptides
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(100 to 1600 Da) in source water.23 We hypothesize that these peptides consisting of 2~7 amino
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acids could potentially pass through drinking water pre-treatment (e.g., coagulation, or filtration)
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and serve as precursors of halogenated peptides, formed during disinfection.
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Several studies have reported the chlorination of peptides in model solutions24-27 and
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wastewater,28,29 with N-chlorinated peptides, especially mono-Cl- peptides, observed as by-
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products. However, current research on the formation of N-chlorinated peptides has mainly
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focused on the chlorination of peptides containing glycine (Gly) or alanine (Ala) amino residues.
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Less has been observed for peptides containing other natural amino acids, for example tyrosine
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(Tyr). N-chloramine formation from Tyr containing peptides should be investigated as Tyr is one
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of most abundant amino acids detected in source waters.18 Furthermore, Tyr has been reported as
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one of the amino acids that could produce chlorinated compounds with high mutagenicity based
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on four different kinds of mutagenesis tests.30 Interestingly, endogenous chlorinated peptides can
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degrade to 3-Cl-Tyr or 3,5-di-Cl-Tyr, which can serve as biomarkers for confirming the role of
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oxidants in inflammatory pathologies.31,32 To supplement existing research on the formation of
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Analytical Chemistry
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N-chloramine from peptides, we aim to explore the unknown chlorinated products resulting from
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reactions between tyrosyl dipeptides and free chlorine in water.
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Based on its structure, there are two types of chlorination sites on the tyrosine residue; the
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N-terminal amino group and the side chain phenol ring. Substitution on the amino group
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produces N-chloramines (i.e., N-chloro dipeptides) containing N-Cl bonds; while substitution on
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the ortho positions of the phenolic group can produce chlorinated dipeptides containing C-chloro
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(C-Cl) but not N-Cl bonds. This presents a challenge; owing to the multiple chlorination sites on
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tyrosyl dipeptides, a complex mixture of chlorinated peptide by-products could form during
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disinfection, some of which existing as isomers. Theoretically, for each tyrosyl dipeptide, the
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formation of eight chlorinated products could be predicted during chlorination. Using tyrosyl
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valine (YV) as an example, Scheme 1 illustrates these eight predicted chlorinated products,
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including two mono-Cl-, three di-Cl-, two tri-Cl-, and one tetra-Cl- YV isomers. Structures
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containing only C-Cl bonds (I and III), are termed C-Cl products. All other chlorinated
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structures contain at least one N-Cl bond and are termed N-Cl products.
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One of the challenges in the identification of possible chlorinated products from tyrosyl
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dipeptides is that their standards are not commercially available and not easily synthesized. High
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performance liquid chromatography with high resolution mass spectrometry (HPLC-HRMS) or
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tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is a powerful technique33 commonly used to project the
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identity of unknowns using the accurate mass information provided by HPLC-HRMS with the
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characteristic fragments observed in MS/MS. However, the C-Cl or N-Cl substituted dipeptide
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isomers proposed in Scheme 1 have identical mass information and the mass spectrometry
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software proposed very similar mass fragmentation patterns, making them indistinguishable. The
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literature is also inconsistent on the characteristic peaks that should be used to confirm N-Cl
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products.31,32 Thus, extra efforts besides HPLC-MS/MS is required to differentiate the possible
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chlorinated dipeptide products, specifically, C-Cl substituted from N-Cl substituted isomers.
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Previous studies have shown that ascorbic acid can reduce N-Cl protein back to non-chlorinated
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amines,34 but whether the C-Cl bond is affected in the same way was not described. If C-Cl
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bonds are not susceptible to reduction by ascorbic acid, the specific reactivity with N-Cl bonds
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could potentially be utilized for the differentiation of N-Cl from C-Cl tyrosyl dipeptide DBP
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isomers.
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An additional challenge in the investigation of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides comes from
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the complexity of different amino acid combinations. Theoretically, the adjacent amino acid in
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the tyrosyl dipeptides could vary among the twenty, common natural amino acids. These can
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generally be divided into several subgroups based on their side chains: small, hydrophobic,
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nucleophilic, aromatic, acidic, neutral, or basic. When combinations of all amino acids with
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tyrosine coexist in water, they may compete with each other for the chlorination reaction. It is
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not feasible to carry out chlorination experiments for all possible tyrosyl dipeptides. To
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effectively cover a wide range of these amino acids, in total, we selected six representative
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tyrosyl dipeptides: tyrosyl alanine (small hydrophobic), tyrosyl valine (hydrophobic), tyrosyl
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phenylalanine (aromatic), tyrosyl glutamic acid (acidic), tyrosyl glutamine (neutral), and tyrosyl
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histidine (basic). Side chains of nucleophilic amino acids have known high reactivity towards
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chlorine, so no representative was selected from this subgroup, as it is unlikely chlorine would
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substitute on the neighbouring Tyr residue.
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Lastly, the formation of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides in water may not necessarily be
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environmentally relevant nor pose a risk to human health. Several factors could affect the
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occurrence of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides in treated drinking water. First, different chlorine
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Analytical Chemistry
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doses have been reported to affect the generation of chlorinated dipeptides.34 What is observed in
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laboratory conditions may not reflect realistic chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptide formation, depending
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on the dose used at WTPs. Second, if the products are not stable they will not reach the consumer,
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and exposure is required for risk. Lastly, the abundance of dipeptides in the source water is
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environmentally variable, which could lead to different levels of chlorinated products. All the
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above factors should be evaluated to illustrate the potential risks from exposure to any new DBPs.
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In this paper, we aim to comprehensively investigate the formation of chlorinated tyrosyl
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dipeptides in water. The first objective is to confirm the possible chlorinated products generated
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through the chlorination of tyrosyl dipeptides. Based on the predicted chlorinated products, we
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utilized HPLC-HRMS or MS/MS combined with ascorbic acid experiments to differentiate the
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N-Cl from the C-Cl isomers. Our second objective is to explore the competitive reaction between
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different tyrosyl dipeptides. Representative tyrosyl dipeptides were chlorinated as a mixture. The
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residual percentage of each dipeptide has been used to illustrate their reactivity towards free
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chlorine. The third objective is to evaluate the possibility of the occurrence of chlorinated
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dipeptides in treated drinking water, by monitoring the change of the chlorinated dipeptides with
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different chlorine doses, chlorination time, and dipeptide starting concentrations in raw water
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samples.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Chemicals and solvents
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Tyrosine (Tyr or Y) (98%), 3-Cl-tyrosine (3-Cl-Y) (97%), tyrosyl alanine (Tyr-Ala or
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YA), tyrosyl phenylalanine (Tyr-Phe or YF), and L-ascorbic acid (≥ 99%) were obtained from
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Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). Tyrosyl glutamic acid (Tyr-Glu or YE) (> 99%), tyrosyl
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histidine (Tyr-His or YH) (≥ 99%), tyrosyl glutamine (Tyr-Gln or YQ), and tyrosyl valine (Tyr-
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Val or YV) (>98%) were obtained from BACHEM (Torrance, CA, USA). Optima LC/MS grade
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water, methanol (MeOH), and acetonitrile (ACN) were purchased from Fisher Scientific
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(Nepean, ON, Canada). HPLC grade formic acid (FA, 49-51% in water) was purchased from
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Fluka. Sodium hypochlorite (NaClO) solution (reagent grade, 10-15% available chlorine) was
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obtained from Acros Organics (Fair Lawn, NJ, USA). The concentration of free chlorine in the
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NaClO solution was measured to be 120 mg/mL (1.7 mol/L) by a chlorine amperometric titrator
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(Autocat 9000, HACH).
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Chlorination of tyrosine and tyrosyl dipeptides
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A chlorine stock solution (0.17 mol/L of free chlorine) was prepared by diluting the
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above NaClO solution with optima water. Each dipeptide (2.5 µmol; i.e., YA, YE, YF, YH, YQ,
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or YV), or tyrosine alone, was chlorinated by adding 5 µmol free chlorine (i.e., 30 µL chlorine
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stock solution) in 25 mL of optima water, resulting in a precursor to free chlorine molar ratio of
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1/2. The reaction mixture was kept in the dark for 1 h at room temperature (22 °C), then excess
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free chlorine was quenched by adding 1.25 mL of 50% FA.35 Ascorbic acid is a commonly used
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quenching reagent that reacts with N-chloramines34 (See section “identification of chlorinated
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tyrosyl dipeptides”), thus it is not suitable for this study.
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Identification of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides
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To identify the chlorinated dipeptides formed through the chlorination reaction, we
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developed an ascorbic acid assisted high performance liquid chromatography high resolution
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tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-HRMS/MS) method (as shown in Scheme 2). In step 1, the
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quenched reaction solution was subjected to HPLC-HRMS analysis. After quenching, the
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Analytical Chemistry
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chlorinated solutions were separated on an Accucore C18 column (150 × 2.1 mm i.d., 2.6 µm;
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pore size, 80 Å; Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). The mobile phase consisted of solvent
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(A), water containing 0.1% FA; and solvent (B), acetonitrile (ACN): water = 5:95 containing 0.1%
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FA. A high-resolution quadrupole time-of-flight (QTOF) mass spectrometer (Sciex X500R)
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(with the resolution of 25,000-35,000) with a Turbo-V electrospray ionization (ESI) source was
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used in positive mode to obtain accurate mass measurements of the [M+H]+ ions. Details of the
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HPLC-HRMS conditions are presented in Supporting Information (SI) Section 1. In step 2, an
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aliquot (10 mL) of the above FA quenched chlorinated solution was reacted with 20 µmol
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ascorbic acid under darkness at room temperature. After reacting with ascorbic acid for 10 min,
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the solutions were analyzed by HPLC-HRMS again without extraction. The HPLC-HRMS full
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scan mass spectra for the chlorinated solution before and after the ascorbic acid were compared.
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In step 3, the quenched chlorination solution before the addition of ascorbic acid was analyzed
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using HPLC-MS/MS running with the information dependent acquisition (IDA) strategy. The
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IDA related parameters are presented in SI Section 2.
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Distribution of chlorinated dipeptides with chlorine dose
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Once the identity of the chlorinated tyrosyl-dipeptide was determined for each
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chromatographic peak, the retention time and peak intensity was used to investigate the
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competitive reaction between different tyrosyl dipeptides as well as the effect of chlorine dose on
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the generation of chlorinated dipeptides. Various amounts of the chlorine stock (i.e., 3, 7.5, 15,
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30, 45, 75, and 150 µmol of free chlorine) were added to solutions containing equal amounts of
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the six dipeptides (i.e., 2.5 µmol of each, in total 15 µmol) in 25 mL optima water. The lowest
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chlorine dose (i.e., 3 µmol or 4.3 mg/L) used was similar to the concentration of residual chlorine
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in treated drinking water (0.04-2 mg/L).9 All the solutions were kept in the dark at the room
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temperature and subjected to HPLC-HRMS analysis after 1 h. The identification of chlorinated
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dipeptides generated was obtained based on their retention time. The change in the intensity of
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the peak areas of each dipeptide and its corresponding chlorinated products were monitored
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versus chlorine doses.
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Distribution of tyrosyl dipeptides and the chlorinated products with chlorination time
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Equal amounts of the six dipeptides (YA, YE, YF, YH, YQ and YV) (i.e., 2.5 µmol of
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each) were mixed in either 25 mL of optima water or raw water in a 40 mL amber vial (i.e., with
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headspace). We believe that the targeted chlorinated products would not diffuse to the headspace
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because of their low volatility. Free chlorine (30 µmol, i.e., 180 µL of the chlorine stock solution)
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was added so the molar ratio between the total dipeptides and free chlorine was 1/2. The chlorine
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dose of 30 µmol (~43 mg/L) was higher than the typical total residual chlorine (0.04- 2 mg/L)9 in
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treated drinking water. This high chlorine dose was used to ensure the generation of all the
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possible chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptide products, so that their overall distribution could be
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investigated. A much lower chlorine dose within the range of 0.04-2 mg/L was used when the
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concentration of dipeptides was reduced in the section “chlorination of dipeptides in raw water”.
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To study the change of the chlorinated dipeptides with chlorination time, the reaction solution in
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the 40 mL amber vial was kept under dark at room temperature up to 9 days. An aliquot (1 mL)
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was taken daily from the reaction solution to monitor the formation of chlorinated dipeptides
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using HPLC-HRMS. The peak area of the chlorinated dipeptides was studied versus the
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chlorination time. This data also illustrate the stability of the chlorinated dipeptides in water. To
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assess the stability the chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides at a low pH, the same experiment was
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performed again except that the reaction solution was quenched at 1 h by adding formic acid.
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Analytical Chemistry
Chlorination of dipeptides in raw water The concentration of peptides in raw water varies spatially and seasonally. To relate our
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research to the water treatment process, we explored the generation of chlorinated dipeptides
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from raw water spiked with various concentrations of dipeptides. Pre-cleaned 4 L amber glass
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bottles (rinsed 3x methanol followed by 3x optima water) were used to collect raw water by grab
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sampling from the Rossdale water treatment plant (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) in April 2017.
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The water samples were filtered with a glass microfiber filter (47 mm × 1.5 µm, Waterman) and
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a nylon membrane disk filter (47 mm × 0.45 µm), then stored at 4 °C prior to analysis. The total
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organic carbon (TOC) of the filtered raw water was 4.3 mg/L (measured in the Natural
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Resources Analytical Laboratory at the University of Alberta).
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The chlorination of dipeptides was conducted at three different concentration levels. We
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spiked 0.25, 2.5, or 25 nmol of each dipeptide into 25 mL of raw water, resulting in dipeptide
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concentrations of 0.01, 0.1, or 1 µM. At each concentration level, the molar ratio of total
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dipeptides to free chlorine was controlled at 1/2 unless otherwise defined. Therefore, the chlorine
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doses are 0.4 µg/L, 4 µg/L, and 0.04 mg/L, respectively, which are within the low end of the
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typical chlorine concentration range of real water samples. As a control, identical experiments
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were performed in optima water. Before each chlorination experiment, three blanks including
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raw water, raw water with dipeptides, and raw water with NaClO were analyzed with the HPLC-
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MRM method. All the above reaction solutions were kept in the dark at room temperature. After
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1 h, 1 mL of each solution was analyzed using HPLC-MS/MS (Sciex QTRAP 5500) in multiple
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reaction monitoring (MRM) mode to measure the unreacted tyrosyl dipeptides and the
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chlorinated products during chlorination in raw water. Detailed instrument conditions can be
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found in SI Section 3.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Differentiation of C-chloro- from N-chloro-tyrosyl dipeptides
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Tyrosyl dipeptides have two possible sites: the free amino group and the phenol ring, for
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chlorine substitution during chlorination, forming a mixture of N-Cl tyrosyl dipeptides (with N-
239
Cl bonds) and C-Cl tyrosyl dipeptides (without N-Cl bonds), respectively. Some of the products
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are isomers (Scheme 1). No standards are commercially available for the chlorinated tyrosyl
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dipeptides. HPLC-HRMS alone cannot differentiate these isomers. To overcome this problem,
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we have developed a new ascorbic acid assisted HPLC-HRMS/MS method for the identification
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of the chlorinated dipeptides produced in chlorination of tyrosyl dipeptides. Scheme 2 describes
244
the three steps of this method. Step 1 uses HPLC to separate the compounds in the reaction
245
mixture resulting from chlorination of each tyrosyl dipeptide solution, coupled with HRMS
246
detection to determine the exact mass of the chlorinated compounds and generate a
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corresponding molecular formula. In step 2, we utilized the specific reduction of N-Cl bonds by
248
ascorbic acid to determine if the chlorine substitution was on the phenol ring (C-Cl) or on the
249
amino group (N-Cl). To validate our experimental design, we confirmed that phenol C-Cl bonds
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are not reduced by ascorbic acid (SI Section 4 and Figure S1). In step 3, we used the MS/MS
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spectra to confirm the isomeric structures of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptide. This 3-step method is
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demonstrated below using tyrosyl valine (YV) as an example.
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In step 1, the HPLC-HRMS analysis of the blank, YV standard solution, and chlorinated
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YV solution prior to the addition of ascorbic acid yielded total ion chromatograms (TICs), as
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shown in Figure 1. Six major peaks were detected in the TIC of the chlorinated YV solution
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without ascorbic acid, compared to the blank. Peak 1 has identical retention time and mass
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Analytical Chemistry
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spectrum compared to the YV standard (Figure 1(a-b)), identifying peak 1 (m/z 281) as the
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remaining unreacted YV after chlorination. In Figure 1(a) The mass spectra show the [M+H]+
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ions of m/z 315 (peaks 2 and 4), 349 (peaks 3 and 5), and 383 (peak 6). The mass difference (∆m)
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of peaks 2 and 4 from peak 1 is 34 Da, which matches with the mass gain from the substitution
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of one proton by one Cl atom, indicating that peaks 2 and 4 correspond to mono-Cl-YV
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(theoretical m/z 315.1106). Similarly, peaks 3 and 5 have ∆m of 68 Da compared to YV,
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corresponding to di-Cl-YV (theoretical m/z 349.0716), whereas peak 6 (∆m of 102) corresponds
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to tri-Cl-YV (theoretical m/z 383.0327). The isotopic patterns of the mass spectra Figure 1(c-g))
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also agree with the theoretical patterns of compounds containing one, two, or three Cl atoms. For
266
example, when the compound contains one Cl atom, a pair of peaks with m/z = M (containing
267
35
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/37Cl abundance, the ratio of the peak intensity of M/M+2 should be 3/1. In Figures 1(c) and (e),
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the ratio of peak heights of m/z 315 and 317 is 3/1. Similarly, when the compound contains two
270
Cl atoms, a group of peaks with m/z = M (containing two 35Cl ), M+2 (containing one 35Cl and
271
one 37Cl), and M+4 (containing two 37Cl) are supposed to appear during MS. Their theoretical
272
relative intensity of M/M+2/M+4 should be 9/6/1. Figures 1(d) and (f) show a ratio of the peak
273
heights of m/z 349, 351, and 353 is 9/6/1, matching the theoretical isotopic pattern of compound
274
that containing two Cl atoms. Mass accuracy for all peaks is within 5 ppm, strongly supporting
275
the proposed molecular formula of peaks 2-6 (shown on Figures 1(b-f)).
276
Cl) and M+2 (containing 37Cl) would show up in the mass spectrum. Based on the natural 35Cl
Having achieved the HPLC-HRMS differentiation of the chlorinated dipeptides with
277
different number of Cl atoms, in step 2 we identified the positions where the Cl atoms were
278
attached. As predicted in Scheme 1, the Cl atom can either substitute on the phenol ring or the
279
amino group, which can lead to the formation of C-Cl or N-Cl bond. To differentiate the
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280
chlorinated dipeptides containing C-Cl only from those containing N-Cl, we used the specific
281
reductive nature of ascorbic acid to reduce the N-Cl bond back to N-H, leaving the C-Cl bond
282
intact. Figure 2 shows the extracted ion chromatograms of YV, mono-, di-, and tri-Cl- YV
283
(m/z=281.1496, 315.1106, 349.0716 and 383.0327) from the TICs of chlorinated YV solution
284
before (Figure 2(a) and after (Figure 2(b)) the addition of ascorbic acid. The mono-Cl-YV
285
products (peaks 2 and 4) on Figure 2 correspond to either 3-Cl-YV or N-Cl-YV as predicted in
286
Scheme 1 (I or II). In Figure 2(b), peak 2 remained after the addition of ascorbic acid,
287
suggesting it only contains C-Cl bond. The other mono-Cl-YV isomer (peak 4) disappeared
288
indicating peak 4 is a mono-Cl-YV product containing an N-Cl bond. Thus, peak 2 is 3-Cl-YV
289
(I), while peak 4 represents N-Cl-YV (II).
290
To support the identification of 3-Cl-YV and N-Cl-YV, we conducted parallel reactions
291
of chlorinated tyrosine with ascorbic acid. As shown in SI Figure S2, similar to the dipeptide
292
YV, the chlorination of tyrosine produced two mono-Cl-Y compounds. The changes before and
293
after the addition of ascorbic acid to mono-Cl-Y are identical to those for the mono-chlorinated
294
YV. The early eluting mono-Cl-Y has been confirmed as 3-Cl-Y using its authentic standard.
295
The late eluting peak has identical m/z to 3-Cl-Y but is diminished after reacting with ascorbic
296
acid, confirming it as N-Cl-Y. The results of mono-Cl-Y support the identification of mono-Cl-
297
YV (i.e., 3-Cl- and N-Cl-YV).
298
We applied the same strategy to the two di-Cl-YV isomers (peaks 3 and 5) on Figure 2,
299
which correspond to two out of the three possible structures proposed in Scheme 1 (III-V). Peak
300
3 did not react with ascorbic acid (Figure 2), indicating it only contains C-Cl bonds, confirming
301
peak 3 as 3,5-di-Cl-YV. Unlike peak 3, peak 5 can react with ascorbic acid, so it contains at least
302
one N-Cl bond. Based on the proposed structures in Scheme 1, peak 5 could be either compound
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IV (3,N-di-Cl-YV) or V (N,N-di-Cl-YV). Similarly, peak 6 on Figure 2 is a tri-Cl-YV product
304
that can react with ascorbic acid. Thus, it could be either 3,5,N-tri-Cl-YV or 3,N,N-tri-Cl-YV as
305
predicted in Scheme 1(VI-VII).
306
In summary, through the ascorbic acid experiment, we have confirmed peaks 2-4 on
307
Figure 2 as 3-Cl-YV, 3,5-di-Cl-YV, and N-Cl-YV. In addition, we have identified peaks 5 and 6
308
as N-Cl peptides, but the number of N-Cl bonds they contain remains unknown. Further
309
experimentation is required to accurately assign structures to peaks 5 and 6.
310
Step 3 further elucidates the structures of peaks 5 and 6 using tandem mass spectrometry.
311
Figure 3(a) is the MS/MS spectrum collected using IDA for m/z=349.1 at tR=17.2 min (i.e.,
312
peak 5, Figure 2(a)). Fragment ions of m/z=141 and 153, which are specific to the phenol ring
313
C-Cl moieties with 35Cl isotope, were observed for peak 5 in Figure 3(a), identifying peak 5 as
314
3,N-di-Cl-YV. The proposed fragmentation scheme is shown in SI Figure S3. Additional
315
fragment ions in Figure 3(a) also match with those predicted by PeakView software and are
316
tabulated in SI Table S2. In addition, we have observed the m/z=143 and 155 on the MS/MS
317
spectrum of m/z=351.1, which is an isotopic peak of m/z=349. The fragmentation pattern mass
318
shift (2 Da) is due to the fragment ions containing the 37Cl isotope SI Figure S4(a). Similarly,
319
Figure 3(b) is the MS/MS spectrum of m/z=383.1 at tR=19.8 min (i.e., peak 6 on Figure 2(a)).
320
The fragment ions of m/z 175 and 186 are characteristic fragments of a compound with two Cl
321
atoms substituted on the phenol ring, identifying peak 6 as3,5,N-tri-Cl-YV. For the isotopic peak
322
m/z=385.0, fragments such as m/z 177 and 188 containing 37Cl were detected (SI Figure S4(b).
323 324
Using the above 3-step method, we are able to prove that peaks 1-6 in Figure 2(a) are YV, 3-Cl-YV, 3,5-di-Cl-YV, N-Cl-YV, 3,N-di-Cl-YV, and 3,5,N-tri-Cl-YV. Additional support
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325
for the assignments of peaks 1-6 was observed in Figure 2. Recall that ascorbic acid
326
dechlorinates the N-Cl bond, reducing it back to an N-H bond.34,36 As a result, N-Cl-YV will
327
revert to YV, 3,N-di-Cl-YV to 3-Cl-YV, and 3,5,N-tri-Cl-YV to 3,5-di-Cl-YV. Only with current
328
assignments for peaks 1-6, can we expect to see the increase in peaks 1-3 and the disappearance
329
of peaks 4-6 simultaneously as shown in Figure 2(b) after the addition of ascorbic acid.
330
In summary, we achieved the identification of two mono-Cl-, two di-Cl-, and one tri-Cl-
331
YV products formed from the chlorination of the dipeptide YV, using the ascorbic acid assisted
332
HPLC-HRMS and MS/MS method at YV to Cl molar ratio of 1/2 chlorination conditions. Using
333
the same strategy, we found one more product, which is the tetra-Cl-YV (i.e., 3,5,N,N-tetra-Cl-
334
YV) at an increased chlorination condition of YV to Cl molar ratio of 1/5 (SI Figure S5). In total,
335
for an individual tyrosyl dipeptide, such as YV, we identified 6 chlorinated products. Using our
336
3-step strategy, we also confirmed the formation of 6 chlorinated products from the chlorination
337
of each tyrosyl dipeptide (YA, YQ, YE, YH, and YF), all the essential XICs and MS/MS spectra
338
for identifying the mono-, di-, and tri-Cl- products were provided in SI Figure S6-S10. The
339
application of the method to water research is further demonstrated in the formation and
340
occurrence of chlorinated tyrosyl peptides in drinking water.
341
Formation of chlorinated dipeptides as a function of dipeptide/free chlorine molar ratio
342
Having established the method for identification of tyrosyl dipeptides and their
343
chlorinated products, we studied competitive reactions between the tyrosyl dipeptides with
344
various doses of chlorine. When a mixture of six tyrosyl dipeptides was chlorinated, with
345
increasing chlorine to total dipeptide molar ratio, the intensity of the residual dipeptides
346
decreases rapidly (SI Figure S11), indicating an increase in reaction rate. At every chlorine dose,
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347
YH had the lowest residual percentage, indicating YH was the most reactive dipeptide studied.
348
Previous research has shown histidine to be more reactive than other individual amino acids
349
during chlorination.37
350
Figure 4 and SI Figures S12-S15 show that the chlorine dose affects both the type of the
351
chlorinated products generated and their relative abundance. Generally, as the chlorine dose
352
increases, the distribution of chlorinated products shifts to form more dipeptides with a higher
353
number of Cl-substitutions, indicating that the chlorination follows a stepwise mechanism. For
354
example, for five tyrosyl dipeptides (YA, YE, YF, YQ, and YV), the intensity of mono-Cl-
355
dipeptides formation, i.e., 3-Cl- (Figure 4(a) and SI Figure S12-15 (a)) or N-Cl- ((Figure 4(b)
356
and SI Figure S12-15 (b)) increases along the x-axis to a maximum at chlorine dose of 30 or 45
357
µmol, but are not detected when the chlorine dose was further increased. And at a higher
358
chlorine dose (≥ 45 µmol), the tetra-Cl-YV (i.e., 3,5,N,N-tetra-Cl-YV) signal begins to appear
359
(Figure 4(b) and SI Figure S12-15(b)). Because of the high reactivity of YH during
360
chlorination, we observed maximum formation of 3-Cl- or N-Cl- YH at approximately 2-fold
361
less chlorine dose (Figure 4(c-d)) compared to the mono-Cl- products formed from the other
362
dipeptides.
363
To facilitate complete pathogen inactivation in varying raw water conditions, different
364
chlorine doses are applied during water treatment. Our results confirmed that various chlorinated
365
products are generated from the chlorination of tyrosyl dipeptides over a wide range of chlorine
366
doses. When tyrosyl peptides exist in water as a mixture, those containing histidine are projected
367
to be more reactive towards generating chlorinated products.
368
Distribution of tyrosyl dipeptides and the chlorinated products with chlorination time
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To explore the possibility of the occurrence of chlorinated dipeptides in treated drinking
370
water, we studied the distribution of these chlorinated dipeptides with chlorination reaction time.
371
The chlorination was performed on a dipeptide mixture (15 µmol in total) and a chlorine dose of
372
30 µmol. Under these conditions, five chlorinated dipeptides (3-Cl-, 3,5-di-Cl-, N-Cl-, 3,N-di-Cl-,
373
and 3,5,N-tri-Cl-) formed from each tyrosyl dipeptide immediately after chlorination, but the
374
distribution of products changed with reaction time. Here we discuss the change of chlorinated
375
YV products with chlorination time as an example. The change over time in the distribution of
376
the chlorinated products formed from the other five tyrosyl dipeptides is similar to YV (SI
377
Figure S16-20). Figure 5(a) shows that the phenol ring C-Cl dipeptides including 3-Cl-YV and
378
3,5-di-Cl-YV continue formation rapidly, up to 9 days. The N-Cl dipeptides, including N-Cl-YV,
379
3,N-di-Cl-YV, and 3,5,N-tri-Cl-YV all increase slightly in the first 4-6 hours then decrease
380
gradually with reaction time (Figure 5(b)). By the 9th day, the intensities of all the N-Cl
381
dipeptides dropped below 50% of their maximum formation. Two reasons may cause the loss of
382
the N-Cl YV products. Firstly, the chlorination of YV to N-Cl YV is a reversible reaction.38
383
Therefore some N-Cl dipeptide products reverted back to N-H dipeptides, such as N-Cl-YV
384
hydrolyzing back to YV. Indeed, we observed an elevation of YV from 1h to 9 days.
385
Alternatively, the N-Cl YVs may degrade to other by-products, such as chloronitriles and
386
chloroaldehydes.39,40 Such degradation of N-Cl dipeptides can be accelerated with lower pH.39,40
387
For example, when the same experiment was carried out, except the reaction solution was
388
acidified with formic acid to pH=2, a more rapid decrease in the N-Cl dipeptides was observed
389
(SI Figure S21). Generally, it takes approximately 5 days for the intensity of N-Cl dipeptides to
390
decay to 50%. This length of time is comparable to the reported half-lives (2-10 days) of other
391
chlorinated dipeptides that do not contain tyrosine39 and much longer than the half lives39 of N-
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392
chlorinated amino acids (~0.1-5 h) reported previously. The change of chlorinated peptides with
393
chlorination time was repeated in raw water and results with the same trends were obtained (SI
394
Figures S22-27).
395
In all, over increasing chlorination time, the chlorinated products would gradually shift
396
from N-Cl dipeptides to phenol ring C-Cl dipeptides. Owing to the high stability of C-Cl peptides
397
and the higher stability of N-Cl peptides compared to their corresponding chlorinated amino
398
acids, the formation and occurrence of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides is highly likely during the
399
water treatment process.
400
Formation potential of chlorinated dipeptides from chlorination of raw water
401
The chlorination of a mixture of six tyrosyl dipeptides was also performed in raw water
402
to mimic the practical water treatment process to evaluate their occurrence potential. Each
403
dipeptide was spiked in the raw water at equal molar concentration and three concentration levels
404
(1µM, 0.1 µM, or 0.01 µM) were studied.
405
We first explored the generation of chlorinated YV from the chlorination of the dipeptide
406
mixture. No chlorinated YV can be detected in any of the blanks (SI Figure S28). The types and
407
the intensity of the chlorinated YV detected in optima and raw water were comparable (Figure
408
6(a-d) and SI Figure S29 (a-d)) at higher dipeptide spike concentrations (1µM or 0.1 µM). At
409
lower concentrations, fewer chlorinated dipeptide products were detected (Figure 6(a-e)).
410
Specifically, when the starting concentration of each dipeptide was decreased from 1 µM to 0.1
411
µM, the number of detected chlorinated products decreased from three (3-Cl-YV, N-Cl-YV, and
412
3,N-di-Cl-YV (Figure 6(a-c))) to two (3-Cl-YV and N-Cl-YV (Figure 6(d-e))).
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Page 20 of 31
When 0.25 nmol (0.01 µM) of each dipeptide in raw water was chlorinated, the types of
414
chlorinated YV detected in the raw or optima water remained the same, with only N-Cl-YV
415
(Figure 6(f)) being detected. However, the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of the N-Cl-YV peak, of 5
416
in raw water was less intense compared to the S/N of 21, observed in optima water (SI Figure
417
S29 (f)). The lower yield of N-Cl-YV may be caused by inadequate free chlorine in the raw
418
water. This indicates that other NOM in the raw water are more reactive than the dipeptides,
419
consuming some available free chlorine. We confirmed this by increasing the ratio of the total
420
dipeptides to free chlorine to 1/10 in the raw water and detected the N-Cl-YV peak with S/N=44
421
(SI Figure S30). Experiments at even lower spiked concentrations were not conducted because it
422
is difficult to control the low volume of Cl solution required to be added under laboratory
423
conditions. For tyrosyl dipeptides including YA, YE, YF, and YQ, the generation of chlorinated
424
dipeptides obtained are similar to YV. Thus, for these five tyrosyl dipeptides, we only presented
425
the results for YV. However, for YH, more chlorinated products were observed during the
426
spiking experiments. For example, when 0.1 µM of YH was spiked in the optima water or raw
427
water, five chlorinated YH products were detected (SI Figure S31).
428
In general, despite that raw water had higher free chlorine demand than optima water, the
429
generation of chlorinated by-products are comparable. In raw water, amino acid concentrations
430
usually range from 0.02 to 10 mg/L,39 while peptides typically exist at concentrations 4-5 times
431
more abundant than that of amino acids.41 In our study, we investigated the threshold to trigger
432
the formation of chlorinated dipeptides. We observed at least one chlorinated product (N-Cl-
433
tyrosyl dipeptide) at spiked concentrations as low as 0.25 nmol of each dipeptide. By mass, this
434
is equivalent to 0.18 mg/L total dipeptides, which is an environmentally relevant concentration.
435
When the dipeptide concentration was increased to 2.5 nmol or higher, other by-products such as
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Analytical Chemistry
436
phenol ring C-Cl dipeptides could be detected with the current HPLC-MRM method. In practice,
437
it is highly likely that chlorinated dipeptides can be generated during the drinking water
438
treatment process and be detected using our method.
439
Conclusions
440
In this study, we developed a 3-step ascorbic acid assisted HPLC-HRMS/MS method for
441
the successful differentiation of N-chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides from C-chlorinated isomers.
442
Over 30 new chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptide type DBPs have been identified. This method could
443
be applied to the investigation of different haloamine DBPs with multiple chlorination sites and
444
expand the discovery research of new DBPs. This study has broadened our understanding of the
445
potential formation of N-Chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides as chlorination by-products. We found
446
these products have potential to form in raw water under drinking water treatment plant
447
conditions and have sufficient stability to potentiate exposure to municipal water consumers with
448
drinking water residence time less than 9 days. Due to the prioritization of N-haloamines as
449
potentially toxic DBPs by QSTR analysis, coupled with the previous illustrated potential
450
cytotoxicity attributed to endogenous N-chloramines, a toxicological evaluation of the 36 newly
451
identified chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptide products should be conducted. We hope thisstudy of
452
chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptide formation and stability under different chlorination conditions may
453
help inform water treatment operators and regulators in future efforts to reduce potential risk to
454
human health.
455
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
456 457
This work was supported by the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the University of Alberta.
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537
FIGURE CAPTION
538
Scheme 1. Theoretically predicted chlorinated YV products generated in the chlorination of YV.
539
Scheme 2. Experimental design for the identification of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides.
540 541 542
Figure 1. (a) Total ion current chromatograms (TICs) of the blank, 10 µM of YV solution, and 100 µM YV solution after chlorination; (b-g) mass spectra of peaks 1-6, showing isotopic patterns of YV and the chlorinated products.
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Figure 2. Extracted ion current chromatograms (XICs) of YV, mono-, di-, and tri-Cl-YV before (a) and after (b) the addition of ascorbic acid.
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Figure 3. MS/MS spectra of (a) m/z 349.1 of peak 5 (b) m/z 383.1 of peak 6.
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Figure 4. Effect of chlorine dose on the formation and distribution of dipeptides and the chlorinated dipeptides during chlorination: (a) YV and phenol ring C-Cl YV; (b) N-Cl YV; (c) YH and phenol ring C-Cl YH; and (d) N-Cl YH.
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Figure 5. Change of YV and chlorinated YV with chlorination time: (a) YV and phenol ring CCl YV and (b) N-Cl YV. Conditions: 2.5 µmol of each tyrosyl dieptide (YA, YE, YF, YH, YQ, and YV) 25 mL of optima water; chlorine dose: 30 µmol. Total dipeptides/chlorine = 1/2.
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Figure 6. Detection of chlorinated YV products generated in the chlorination of raw water containing various amounts of dipeptides. The molar ratio of the total dipeptides to free chlorine was kept at 1/2. The raw water samples contained mixed peptides each at (a-c) 25 nmol (1 µM); (d-e) 2.5 nmol (0.1 µM); (f) 0.25 nmol (0.01 µM).
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Scheme 1. Theoretically predicted chlorinated YV products generated in the chlorination of YV.
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Scheme 2. Experimental design for the identification of chlorinated tyrosyl dipeptides.
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Figure 1. (a) Total ion current chromatograms (TICs) of the blank, 10 µM of YV solution, and 100 µM YV solution after chlorination; (b-g) mass spectra of peaks 1-6, showing isotopic patterns of YV and the chlorinated products.
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Figure 2. Extracted ion current chromatograms (XICs) of YV, mono-, di-, and tri-Cl-YV before (a) and after (b) the addition of ascorbic acid.
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Figure 3. MS/MS spectra of (a) m/z 349.1 of peak 5 (b) m/z 383.1 of peak 6.
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Figure 4. Effect of chlorine dose on the formation and distribution of dipeptides and the chlorinated dipeptides during chlorination, demonstrated in (a) YV and phenol ring C-Cl YV; (b) N-Cl YV; (c) YH and phenol ring C-Cl YH; and (d) N-Cl YH.
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Figure 5. Change of YV and chlorinated YV with chlorination time: (a) YV and phenol ring CCl YV and (b) N-Cl YV. Conditions: 2.5 µmol of each tyrosyl dipeptide (YA, YE, YF, YH, YQ, and YV) 25 mL of optima water; chlorine dose: 30 µmol. Total dipeptides/chlorine = 1/2.
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Figure 6. Detection of chlorinated YV products generated in the chlorination of raw water containing various amounts of dipeptides. The molar ratio of the total dipeptides to free chlorine was kept at 1/2. The raw water samples contained mixed peptides each at (a-c) 25 nmol (1 µM); (d-e) 2.5 nmol (0.1 µM); (f) 0.25 nmol (0.01 µM).
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