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Photochemical and non-photochemical transformations of cysteine with dissolved organic matter Chiheng Chu, Paul R. Erickson, Rachel A. Lundeen, Dimitrios Stamatelatos , Peter J. Alaimo, Douglas E. Latch, and Kristopher McNeill Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b01291 • Publication Date (Web): 12 May 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 22, 2016
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Environmental Science & Technology
Manuscript
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Photochemical and non-photochemical transformations of cysteine with dissolved organic
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matter
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Chiheng Chu †, Paul R. Erickson †, Rachel A. Lundeen †, Dimitrios Stamatelatos †, Peter J. Alaimo ‡, Douglas E. Latch ‡, and Kristopher McNeill †*
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† Institute of Biogeochemistry and Pollutant Dynamics (IBP), Department of Environmental Systems Science, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
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‡ Department of Chemistry, Seattle University, Seattle, WA 98122, USA
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*Corresponding authors
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Kristopher McNeill
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Tel. +41 (0)44 6324755; Fax. +41 (0)44 6321438
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Email:
[email protected] 16 17
Number of Figures:
3
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Number of Tables:
2
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Total word count:
6083
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Abstract
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Cysteine (Cys) plays numerous key roles in the biogeochemical processes in natural waters.
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Despite its importance, a full assessment of Cys abiotic transformation kinetics, products and
24
pathways under environmental conditions has not been conducted. This study is a mechanistic
25
evaluation of the photochemical and non-photochemical (dark) transformations of Cys in
26
solutions containing chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM). The results show that Cys
27
underwent abiotic transformations under both dark and irradiated conditions. Under dark
28
conditions, the transformation rates of Cys were moderate and highly pH- and temperature-
29
dependent. Under UVA or natural sunlight irradiations, Cys transformation rates were enhanced
30
by up to two orders of magnitude compared to rates under dark conditions. Product analysis
31
indicated cystine and cysteine sulfinic acid were the major photooxidation products. In addition,
32
this study provides an assessment of the contributions of singlet oxygen, hydroxyl radical,
33
hydrogen peroxide, and triplet dissolved organic matter in Cys photochemical oxidation
34
reactions.
35
photochemical loss of Cys, which will require further study to identify.
The results suggest that another unknown pathway was dominant in the
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INTRODUCTION
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Thiols (RSH) are of great importance in both biological and geochemical systems in natural
38
waters. Thiol-containing compounds, such as cysteine (Cys) and Cys-containing biomolecules,
39
are abundant in microbes and involved in numerous biochemical processes, such as binding
40
metals, stabilizing protein structure through disulfide linkages, and acting as redox-active
41
nucleophiles in enzymes.1-4 When released into the extracellular environment, Cys and Cys-
42
containing biomolecules play key roles in environmental nitrogen, sulfur, and metal cycling. For
43
instance, Cys is known to be important in the speciation, transport, reactivity, and bioavailability
44
of metals (e.g., Hg, Cu, Zn, Cd, and Pb) in aquatic systems.5-8 Recent studies have shown that
45
complexation of Hg by Cys significantly affects both the Hg methylation by microbes9-12 and
46
methylmercury photoreactivity13,14 in natural waters. From a nutrient bioavailability viewpoint,
47
Cys is not only a bioavailable source of organic nitrogen (along with other free amino acids), but
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also a rare source of reduced organic sulfur in natural waters. Additionally, Cys in surface waters
49
has been hypothesized to be the direct precursor to carbon disulfide and carbonyl sulfide in
50
marine systems, and thus plays a key role in the global sulfur cycle.1,15 Despite the important
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roles that Cys plays in the environment, there is little known about its transformation processes
52
in natural waters. These transformation processes regulate the aqueous steady-state
53
concentrations of Cys (~ 10-10 - 10-11 M in surface waters, including both free Cys and oxidized
54
Cys disulfide dimer)3 and subsequently affect environmental processes involving Cys.
55
Previous studies have suggested that photochemical transformation is an important sink for
56
thiols in surface waters.16,17 While direct phototransformation of Cys is not possible due to its
57
negligible absorbance in the solar spectrum (Figure 1), photochemical oxidation of Cys may
58
occur indirectly by reaction with various photochemically produced reactive intermediates
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(PPRI).18-22 In natural waters, chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) acts as the major
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sensitizer of PPRI.23 Previous photochemical studies on free amino acids have demonstrated that
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the relative importance of each PPRI-mediated photooxidation pathway may vary greatly among
62
different amino acid species during CDOM-sensitized photolysis.24-27 To date, the susceptibility
63
of Cys to phototransformation in sunlit surface waters and the relative importance of PPRI on
64
Cys phototransformation remain unclear.
65
In addition to photochemical transformation, abiotic non-photochemical transformation (i.e.,
66
under dark conditions) may also play an important role in the fate of Cys in environmental
67
systems. Recent work shows that hydrogen sulfide (H2S), the simplest sulfhydryl-containing
68
molecule present in surface waters (~ 10-9 - 10-11 M),28 can be oxidized non-photochemically in
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CDOM solutions with a half-life of days and numerous oxidation products are formed upon H2S
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dark oxidation.29 Analogously, the free thiol group of Cys may undergo similar or even faster
71
dark oxidation when in solution with CDOM, considering the lower proton coupled electron
72
transfer potential for Cys compared to H2S.30 The abiotic transformation of Cys, either through
73
the photochemical or non-photochemical transformation pathways, may be dependent on
74
solution pH because of the higher electron density of the deprotonated anionic thiol moiety (Cys-)
75
compared to the protonated neutral species (Cys0).
76
While there is considerable prior work indicating that photochemical and non-photochemical
77
transformations of free Cys should occur in natural waters, an evaluation of Cys transformation
78
in aquatic systems has not yet been conducted. The lack of in-depth assessment of the free Cys
79
has lagged behind that of the other canonical free amino acids, which have been readily studied
80
in natural waters,24 largely due to two reasons. First, free Cys is extremely reactive, especially
81
under oxic conditions when trace metals are present. Metal-catalyzed oxidation of thiols can
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easily occur on the benchtop,31 for instance, due to trace amounts of metals in glassware, water
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or reagents used in experiments, leading to artifacts in reactions rates of Cys oxidation. Secondly,
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some methods to analyze and quantify free amino acids, such as ortho-phthaldialdehyde-
85
derivatization,24,32 are not compatible with Cys. These analytical drawbacks related to Cys
86
analysis are evident from both laboratory studies24 and many environmental studies,33-35 which
87
have analyzed all of the other 19 proteinogenic amino acids but omitted Cys from their studies.
88
The goal of this study was to evaluate the abiotic photochemical and non-photochemical
89
transformations of free Cys in natural waters. We assessed the transformation rates of Cys under
90
UVA irradiation and natural sunlight conditions, as well as dark conditions, in CDOM solutions
91
at pH 5.7-9.9. In addition, the reaction rate constants of Cys with environmentally relevant PPRI
92
(i.e., singlet oxygen (1O2), triplet state excited sensitizers (3Sens*), and hydrogen peroxide
93
(H2O2)) were established over a range of solution pH values. Utilizing PPRI-specific rate
94
constants, the relative contributions of each PPRI-mediated transformation pathways to the
95
transformation of Cys during CDOM-sensitized photolysis were assessed. These assessments
96
were conducted following trace metal clean techniques to avoid unwanted metal-catalyzed
97
oxidation reactions. In addition, a selective thiol derivatization agent, monobromobimane
98
(mBBr), was used as fluorescence-based probe for Cys and also as a protecting group to prevent
99
the oxidation of Cys before analysis.36
100 101
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Materials and sample preparation. Detailed information on sources and preparation
103
methods of chemicals is provided in the supporting information (SI, Section S1). All
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experiments conducted in H2O solutions were pH-buffered using acetate (pH 4.0-6.0), phosphate 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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(pH 6.0-7.5), tris (pH 7.5-9.5), carbonate (above pH 9.5) all at 5 mM. To prevent contamination
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with trace metals, which might catalyze the oxidation of Cys, all glassware was acid-washed
107
prior to use.
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Suwannee River Natural Organic Matter (SRNOM, Lot Nr. 1R101N) and Pahokee Peat
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Humic Acid Standard (PPHA, Lot Nr. 15103H) were purchased from the International Humic
110
Substances Society (IHSS) and were used as received. SRNOM and PPHA were chosen as
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model CDOM because of their representative origins of decomposing vegetation and agricultural
112
peat soil, respectively. CDOM solutions were prepared following previously published
113
methods.25 All CDOM solutions used in this study had a concentration of 11.4 mgC/L.
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Cys reaction with singlet oxygen. The photochemical transformation rate constants of Cys
115
with 1O2 were assessed either through steady-state photolysis in the presence of a model 1O2
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sensitizer or through time-resolved 1O2 phosphorescence measurements.
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Steady-state photolysis. Steady-state photolysis experiments using perinaphthenone as the 1O2
118
sensitizer were conducted at pH 5.0 and 10.0, where Cys was in the neutral form (Cys0) or
119
anionic form (Cys-), respectively (n.b., the pKa1 of the thiol group is 8.42; see below). During the
120
steady-state photolysis, Cys oxidation was mediated by a combination of 1O2 and other PPRI.
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The involvement of 1O2 on Cys oxidation was probed by using D2O as a solvent in place of H2O
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due to the well-known solvent isotope effect.37 D2O solutions were pD-adjusted with NaOD and
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DCl where pD = pH* + 0.4 (pH* corresponds to the uncorrected pH meter reading). All
124
solutions during the steady-state photolysis experiments contained Cys (initial concentration of
125
40 µM), furfuryl alcohol (FFA, initial concentration of 100 µM), a pH buffer species (5 mM),
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and a 1O2 sensitizer (i.e., perinaphthenone). At pH 5.0, any secondary kinetic isotope effect on
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the Cys transformation rate due to the conversion of S-H bonds to S-D in D2O solution was
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assumed to be negligible and ignored. The observed pseudo-first-order phototransformation rate
129
HO constants (units of s–1) of Cys0 and Cys- in H2O ( kCys and ,obs
130
DO and ( kCys ,obs
131
Cys transformation rate constants could be described by Equations 1-4.
2
0
2
0
HO kCys ,obs , respectively) and D2O 2
−
DO kCys ,obs, respectively) were assessed at solution pH 5.0 and pH 10.0. The observed 2
−
1
H2O
O2
1
H2 O
Other
kCys ,obs = kCys ,rxn [ O2 ] ss,pH5 +kCys 0
0
1
D2O
O2
()
0
1
D2O
Other
kCys ,obs = kCys ,rxn [ O2 ] ss,pH5 +kCys 0
0
1
H2O
O2
()
0
H2O
1
Other
kCys ,obs = kCys ,rxn [ O2 ] ss,pH10 +kCys −
−
1
D2O
O2
()
−
1
D2 O
Other
kCys ,obs = kCys ,rxn [ O2 ] ss,pH10 +kCys −
−
()
−
132
O O O O where [ 1O2 ]Hss,pH5 , [ 1O2 ]Hss,pH10 , [ 1O2 ]Dss,pH5 , and [ 1O2 ]Dss,pH10 were the steady-state concentrations
133
of 1O2 at pH 5.0 and 10.0 in H2O and D2O;
134
constants (units of s–1) of Cys0 and Cys- with other PPRI, respectively. The 1O2-mediated
135
bimolecular reaction rate constants (units of M–1s–1) of Cys0 and Cys- ( k
136
were thus obtained (Equation 5 and 6).
2
2
2
2
k
=
k
−
D 2O
H 2O
0
0
1
D 2O
1
H 2O
1
O2 0
Cys ,rxn
1
and
O2
k Cys ,rxn ) −
()
[ O 2 ] ss,pH5 −[ O 2 ] ss,pH5 =
D 2O
H 2O
−
−
k Cys ,obs − k Cys ,obs
1
O2 Cys − ,rxn
0
k Cys ,obs − k Cys ,obs
1
O2 Cys 0 ,rxn
Other Other kCys and kCys were the first order reaction rate
1
D 2O
1
H 2O
()
[ O 2 ] ss,pH10 − [ O 2 ] ss,pH10
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O2
137
The 1O2 reaction rate constants of Cys ( kCys,rxn ) between pH 5.0 and 10.0 were modeled
138
O (Equation 7) accounting for the respective reaction rate constants of Cys0 and Cys- ( kCys and ,rxn
139
kCys ,rxn ) and their respective fractions ( fCys
1
2 0
1
O2
and
0
−
1
1
O2
fCys ) to total Cys, −
1
O2
O2
k Cys,rxn = k Cys ,rxn f Cys + k Cys ,rxn f Cys 0
0
−
−
(ૠ)
140
The fractions of Cys0 and Cys- were calculated based on the pKa of thiol sidechain (pKa1) and
141
the solution pH (Equation 8 and 9). The pKa1 values of thiol sidechain in H2O and D2O
142
measured by UV-vis spectroscopic titration were 8.42 and 8.37, respectively (Figure S2, pKa1 in
143
D2O was obtained as uncorrected pH meter reading).
fCys = 0
1 + 1+Ka1 /[H ]
(ૡ)
+
fCys
−
Ka1 /[H ] = + 1+Ka1 /[H ]
(ૢ)
144
Time-resolved phosphorescence. Time-resolved 1O2 phosphorescence measurements were
145
conducted at pH 10.2 with perinaphthenone as the 1O2 sensitizer using a laser flash photolysis
146
setup, where the excitation wavelength was 350 nm and 1O2 phosphorescence was monitored at
147
1270±5 nm. Cys was added at concentrations ranging from 0.06 mM to 20 mM to quench the
148
1
149
decrease in the 1O2 lifetime upon Cys addition to Equation 10:
O2 phosphorescence. The bimolecular rate constant
1/ τ
1
O2
1
1
O2
kCys ,rxn −
1
O2
= kCys ,rxn [Cys]+1/ τ 0
O2
−
1
1
150
where [Cys] was the concentration of Cys and
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with or without Cys in solution, respectively.
τO
2
and
τ 0O
2
was determined by fitting the
()
were the measured 1O2 lifetime
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Cys and 2,4,6-trimethylphenol (TMP) reactions with triplet state ketone sensitizers. The
153
photochemical transformation rate constants of Cys with model triplet state sensitizers (3Sens*)
154
were assessed at pH 4.4 and 10.2 using transient absorption spectroscopy following previously
155
published methods.38 As triplet ketones are believed to be among the key oxidants formed upon
156
the photolysis of CDOM mixtures,39 a series of ketone sensitizers (i.e., perinaphthenone,
157
lumichrome, 2-acetonaphthone, 3’-methoxyacetophenone, and benzophenone-4-carboxylate,
158
herein defined as 3Sens*, see Section S2 for details) were used to represent the range of ketone
159
triplet oxidants in CDOM with varying excited triplet state redox potentials. 3
160
Sens* The bimolecular reaction rate constant of Cys with 3Sens* ( kCys,rxn , units of M–1s–1) was
161
determined by fitting the decay of 3Sens* lifetime as a function of increasing Cys concentration
162
(ranging from 0.25 mM to 30 mM) to Equation 11:
1/ τ 3
τ
Sens*
3
and
τ 0 Sens*
3
Sens*
3
3
Sens*
= kCys,rxn [Cys]+1/ τ 0
Sens*
()
were the measured 3Sens* lifetime with or without Cys. The
163
where
164
bimolecular reaction rate constant of TMP with 3Sens* was assessed using the same approach.
165
Cys reaction with hydrogen peroxide. H2O2-mediated Cys oxidation was carried out in 2
166
mL protein LoBind eppendorf tubes in the dark at different solution pH values ranging from 5.0
167
to 10.4. The solutions contained Cys (initial concentrations of 20 µM), a buffer species (5 mM),
168
and H2O2 (500 µM). Aliquots were removed at various time points for kinetic analysis of Cys.
169
The bimolecular reaction rate constant,
HO (units of M–1s–1), of Cys with H2O2 was kCys,rxn 2
2
170
HO calculated from the observed pseudo-first-order rate constant of Cys transformation ( kCys,obs ) and
171
the concentration of H2O2 ([H2O2]) (Equation 12).
2
2
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HO kCys,obs = [H2O2 ] 2
H2O2 Cys,rxn
k 172
The experimental
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2
()
H2O2
kCys,rxn at pH values between 5.0 and 10.4 was fit to a model (Equation 13) H2O2
H2O2 − ,rxn
173
considering the respective reaction rate constants of Cys0, Cys- and Cys2- ( kCys ,rxn , kCys
174
kCys
0
H2O2 2−
,rxn ),
and their respective fractions (
H2O2
fCys , fCys 0
H2O2
−
and
fCys
2−
H2O2
) to total Cys,
H2O2
kCys,rxn = kCys ,rxn fCys + kCys ,rxn fCys + kCys 0
175 176
0
−
and
−
2−
,rxn
fCys
2−
()
The fractions of Cys species were calculated based on the thiol pKa1 (pKa1 = 8.42),Nterminal amine pKa2 (pKa2 = 10.28),40 and the solution pH (Equation 14-16). +
Ka1 /[H ] = + + 1+Ka1 /[H ]+[H ]/Ka2
()
−
1 + + 1+Ka1 /[H ]+[H ]/Ka2
()
2−
[H ]/Ka2 = + + 1+Ka1 /[H ]+[H ]/Ka2
fCys
0
fCys =
+
fCys
()
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Cys transformation in CDOM solutions. Phototransformation. The photolysis experiments
178
of Cys in CDOM solutions were conducted at different solution pH ranging from 5.7 to 9.9. The
179
solutions contained Cys (initial concentrations of 40 µM), a buffer species (5 mM), and CDOM
180
(i.e., either SRNOM or PPHA, 11.4 mgC/L). In order to probe the 1O2, •OH, and H2O2
181
production in CDOM solutions, identical photolysis solutions were prepared containing a PPRI
182
probe and CDOM, as described in the SI (Section S5). Briefly, FFA was used as a probe to
183
determine the steady-state 1O2 concentration in the bulk aqueous phase ([1O2]ss). Potassium
184
terephthalic acid (TPA) was used as a probe to determine the steady-state •OH concentration in
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the bulk aqueous phase ([•OH]ss).41,42 Ampliflu Red was used to probe H2O2 formation rate
186
( RH2O2 , unit of M/s) by the formation of fluorescent resorufin in the presence of horseradish
187
peroxidase.43 light
188
CDOM ) was The first-order transformation rate of Cys in CDOM-containing solutions ( kCys,obs
189
obtained in UVA- or sunlight-irradiated experiments. The relative importance of each PPRI-
190
mediated Cys transformation pathway in irradiated CDOM solutions was estimated by
191
comparing the estimated pseudo-first-order reaction rate constant of each PPRI-mediated Cys
192
PPRI CDOM phototransformation ( kCys ) with kCys,obs .24,44-46 For 1O2 and •OH, the pseudo-first-order reaction
193
O rate constants ( kCys and
194
O constants for the reaction between Cys and 1O2 or •OH ( kCys,rxn and
195
steady-state 1O2 or •OH concentrations ([1O2]ss and [•OH]ss) in CDOM solutions, respectively
196
(Equation 17 and 18).
light
1
2
•OH ) were estimated by multiplying the bimolecular reaction rate kCys 1
2
1
1
O2
1
O2
O2
•OH
kCys,rxn ) with the measured
1
kCys = (kCys ,rxn fCys + kCys ,rxn fCys )[ O2 ]ss 0
0
•OH
−
(ૠ)
−
(ૡ)
•OH
kCys = kCys,rxn [•OH]ss 197
Unlike other PPRI, H2O2 was relatively long-lived upon formation.47 H2O2-mediated pseudo-
198
HO first-order reaction rate constant of Cys ( kCys ) increased linearly with irradiation time (t)
199
HO (Equation 19). An averaged kCys for a typical sampling period (i.e., 60 min) was adapted to
200
assess the contribution of H2O2-mediated transformation.
2
2
H2O2
2
2
H2O2
H2O2
H2O2
kCys = (kCys ,rxn fCys + kCys ,rxn fCys + kCys 0
0
−
−
2−
,rxn
fCys )RH O t 2−
2
2
(ૢ)
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Dark transformation. Dark transformation experiments were carried out using the identical
202
solutions from the above Cys phototransformation experiments: Cys (40 uM), buffer species
203
(5mM, pH 5.7-9.9), and either SRNOM or PPHA. Identical dark controls were also prepared
204
without CDOM (referred to herein as CDOM-free controls). Aliquots of the solutions were
205
transferred to 2 mL protein LoBind eppendorf tubes and stored in a refrigerator (set at 15 °C) or
206
oven (set at 32 °C). Aliquots from the solution were removed at various time points for kinetic
207
analysis of Cys.
208
Steady-state photolysis setups. The steady-state photolysis experiments were carried out in
209
separate experimental setups. The light intensity of UVA and sunlight was monitored through
210
combined use of p-nitroanisole/ pyridine actinometry and radiometer measurements (Ocean
211
Optics Jaz, see SI for more information, Section S6).
212
UVA photolysis. Acid-washed borosilicate test tubes, which were transparent to the
213
wavelengths used in this study, were employed for all photolysis experiments. Sensitized Cys
214
photolyses were conducted in a photochemical reactor (Rayonet) equipped with two (for
215
solutions containing perinaphthenone) or twelve (for solutions containing CDOM) 365 nm bulbs
216
(Southern New England Ultraviolet Co., RPR-3500 Å). The photolysis experiments were
217
conducted in a temperature-controlled room set at 10 °C. At designated time points, aliquots
218
from
219
hydroxyterephthalate (hTPA), p-nitroanisole or resorufin.
the
photolysis
solution
were
removed
for
kinetic
analysis
of
Cys,
FFA,
220
Sunlight photolysis. Sunlight photolysis experiments were conducted during midday (10 am
221
to 3 pm) on clear days on the roof of the CHN building at ETH Zurich (47°22’45’’N,
222
8°32’55’’E). Solutions in acid-washed test tubes were aligned at a 45° angle to the ground in a
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home-built rack. The rack was turned periodically to keep the tubes facing the sun. Aliquots
224
were removed at regular time points for analysis of Cys, FFA, hTPA, or p-nitroanisole.
225
Quantification of FFA, p-nitroanisole, resorufin, hTPA, Cys and Cys transformation
226
products. FFA and p-nitroanisole concentrations were quantified using a Waters ACQUITY
227
ultra high-pressure liquid chromatography (UPLC) coupled to a photodiode array detector. Cys
228
was derivatized with mBBr and subsequently analyzed by UPLC with fluorescence detection.
229
Resorufin and hTPA concentrations were directly analyzed by UPLC with fluorescence
230
detection. Cys transformation products were analyzed on a Waters ACQUITY nanoUPLC
231
coupled to an Orbitrap high resolution mass spectrometer (HRMS, Thermo Exactive) equipped
232
with electrospray ionization (ESI). Previously published nanoUPLC-ESI-HRMS methods48 were
233
followed. Detailed information on sample preparation, UPLC separation and detection
234
parameters are provided in the SI (Section S4).
235
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
236
General observations. Cys was found to spontaneously oxidize in solution upon standing in
237
air at room temperature, which added an experimental challenge. While taking care to work with
238
acid-cleaned glassware to remove metals that catalyzed the oxidation, the spontaneous oxidation
239
of Cys was limited. We conducted a number of control experiments to assess the Cys stability in
240
CDOM-free solutions, prior to evaluating the abiotic transformations of Cys in CDOM-
241
containing solutions. Results from CDOM-free controls show that less than 10% of Cys was
242
transformed under UVA irradiation and less than 5% of Cys was transformed under dark
243
conditions over the course of 8 hours. In addition, we performed control experiments of Cys
244
photolysis in the presence of the metal chelating agent EDTA to test the possibility of trace
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245
metal contamination in CDOM isolates. The result shows that the transformation rates of Cys
246
remained unchanged upon addition of EDTA, indicating that Cys transformation was not likely
247
affected by trace metal from CDOM isolates (Figure S10). These results established that
248
unwanted metal-catalyzed oxidation of Cys was negligible compared to Cys transformation with
249
CDOM under all study conditions within the timeframe of the experiments.
250
When Cys was allowed to react with CDOM in the dark, slow transformation of Cys was
251
observed with a half-life on the timescale of days. This observation is consistent with two
252
distinct transformation pathways: (i) CDOM is redox active and capable of accepting
253
electrons,49-51 and thus may oxidize Cys; and, (ii) CDOM can act as an electrophile, and reacts
254
with S-based nucleophiles.29,52,53 The balance between these two reaction modes is not known in
255
this case. Under sunlight or UVA irradiation in the presence of CDOM, Cys was found to
256
degrade rapidly with a half-life on the timescale of minutes, indicating the fast indirect
257
phototransformation of Cys in CDOM solutions. Evaluations of the kinetics, pathways and
258
transformation products from the abiotic transformations of Cys are provided in the subsequent
259
sections.
260
Cys transformation in CDOM solutions. The non-photochemical and photochemical
261
transformation reactions of Cys in CDOM solutions all followed pseudo-first-order degradation
262
kinetics and the rates were found to be highly pH-dependent (Figure 2a, showing Cys
263
transformation in UVA-irradiated SRNOM solutions as an example). Under UVA irradiation,
264
the solution temperatures gradually increased from 10 °C to 15 °C. Under sunlight irradiation,
265
the solution temperature increased from 25 °C to around 32 °C within 30 min and then remained
266
CDOM stable during irradiation. Accordingly, Cys dark transformation rate constants ( kCys,obs ) obtained
dark
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267
CDOM at 15 °C and 32 °C were compared with kCys,obs
268
respectively.
under UVA and sunlight irradiations,
dark
269
CDOM Cys non-photochemical transformation. In both SRNOM and PPHA dark solutions, kCys,obs
270
values increased from pH 5.7 to pH 8.7, suggesting higher transformation rates of Cys- than Cys0.
271
CDOM slightly decreased with increasing solution pH. In both SRNOM and Above pH 8.7, kCys,obs
272
PPHA solutions, the Cys reactivity was sensitive to solution temperature with two-fold higher
273
rates at 32 °C than at 15 °C (Figure 2b). Despite different origins of the DOM isolates, the Cys
274
oxidation rates in PPHA solutions were quite similar to those in SRNOM under dark conditions
275
(Figure 2b).
dark
light
276
CDOM Cys photochemical transformation. Generally, kCys,obs values of Cys in both SRNOM and
277
PPHA irradiated solutions increased from pH 5.7 to 9.9, with slight decrease in PPHA solutions
278
under sunlight irradiation from pH 8.7 to pH 9.9 (Figure 2c). The increased indirect
279
phototransformation rates with increasing solution pH suggest higher photoreactivity of Cys-
280
than Cys0. The indirect transformation rates of Cys were higher under sunlight irradiation than
281
UVA irradiation both in SRNOM and PPHA solutions. In addition, Cys underwent faster
282
indirect phototransformation in solutions containing PPHA than SRNOM (Figure 2c). The
283
differences in Cys photoreactivity between SRNOM and PPHA are most likely due simply to the
284
fact that PPHA has a higher absorbance (Figure 1).
285
photoreactivity in PPHA and SRNOM solutions matches their absorbance ratio.
The magnitude of the ratio in Cys
286
Cys phototransformation products in CDOM solutions. The transformation products of
287
Cys during the irradiation were assessed. Previous studies report that Cys is prone to oxidation at
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288
the thiol functional group (RSH) that forms disulfide (RSSR, cystine), sulfenic acid (RSOH),
289
sulfinic acid (RSO2H), and sulfonic acid (cysteic acid, RSO3H) under various conditions.54-60 In
290
this study, the formation of these transformation products in UVA-irradiated CDOM solution
291
was investigated at pH 5.7 and pH 9.9, where the thiol and thiolate forms were the dominant
292
species, respectively. The results showed that RSSR and RSO2H were the two major products of
293
Cys oxidation in irradiated CDOM solutions with an initial Cys concentration of 40 µM, and
294
these products together contribute around 30% of Cys transformation products (Figure S4).
295
Notably, the concentrations of Cys found in surface waters are considerably lower than Cys
296
concentrations used in this study.3 While this is not expected to impact the disappearance
297
kinetics, as they were cleanly first-order, this may affect the product distribution, especially the
298
formation of RSSR. We did not detect the formation of RSO3H, which was likely due to the
299
short photolysis period. In addition to the HRMS-identified transformation products, we predict
300
that unidentified RSH-CDOM conjugates may also form. This could be due to the conjugation
301
capability of thiols to quinones (Figure 3), for example.29,52,53 No effort was made to quantify
302
RSH-CDOM conjugate formation in this study.
303
The photochemical reactivity of RSSR and RSO2H was further tested in UVA-irradiated
304
CDOM solutions. RSSR transformed quite slowly over the course of 6 hours irradiation. The
305
product analysis indicates formation of small amounts of Cys upon phototransformation of
306
RSSR (Figure S5). This result agrees with the previous study that reported the photochemical
307
formation of free thiol by cleavage of disulphide linkages.55 When RSO2H was subjected to
308
photochemical reaction in the presence of SRNOM or PPHA, RSO3H was identified as the
309
major transformation product (Figure S6). This transformation pathway in CDOM solutions was
310
in accordance with the observed oxidation of RSO2H into RSO3H in cellular systems.61,62 The
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311
transformation rates of RSO2H were much higher at pH 5.7 than at pH 9.9 in both SRNOM and
312
PPHA solutions. The reason for the higher reactivity of RSO2H at lower pH is not known.
313
Reaction rate constants of Cys with PPRI. The prior sections focused on kinetics and
314
products of Cys abiotic transformation in CDOM solutions. Below we examine the intrinsic
315
reaction rate constants of Cys with the well-defined PPRI in CDOM solutions, to provide a basis
316
for assessing the contribution of each PPRI-mediated pathway (Table 1).
317
Reaction rate constants of Cys with singlet oxygen. The photochemical transformation rate
318
constants of Cys with 1O2 were assessed through either steady-state photolysis or time-resolved
319
phosphorescence. The steady-state phototransformation of Cys with 1O2 followed pseudo-first-
320
order kinetics at pH 10.0. The 1O2 steady-state concentration in D2O was 10-fold higher than in
321
O was H2O, which was consistent with the solvent isotope effect.37 The rate constant kCys ,rxn
322
determined to be 2.3 × 108 M–1s–1. At pH 5.0, no Cys transformation was observed through
323
O O photolysis (Table 1). The lower kCys than kCys is in agreement with the higher 1O2 reactivity ,rxn ,rxn
324
of the electron-rich thiolate form.20,21 With the respective 1O2 reaction rate constants for different
325
protonation states of Cys,
1
2 −
1
1
2 0
2 −
1
O was modeled as a function of solution pH (Figure S3). kCys,rxn 2
326
In addition to steady-state photolysis, the reaction rate constant of Cys with 1O2 was further
327
investigated by time-resolved 1O2 phosphorescence. At pH 10.2, the quenching rate constant of
328
1
329
O study.20 Nevertheless, the kCys value measured by 1O2 phosphorescence quenching experiment ,rxn
330
was lower than the value of
O O2 by Cys- ( kCys ) was determined to be 1.5 × 108 M–1s–1, which is consistent with a previous ,rxn 1
2 −
1
2 −
1
8
O2
kCys ,rxn measured by steady-state photolysis (i.e., 2.3 × 10 −
M–1s–1).
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331
We tentatively attribute the different
332
time-scales. The time-resolved photolysis experiment, which followed the loss of 1O2, allowed
333
for the direct observation of the elementary reaction step between one Cys and one 1O2 molecule.
334
In the steady-state experiment, in which the loss of Cys was followed, the observed decay was
335
the sum of all of the Cys loss processes. For example, if additional oxidants are formed in the
336
reaction, such as superoxide or H2O2, they would contribute to the observed Cys loss in the
337
steady-state experiments. The ratio of the steady-state and laser flash photolysis rate constants is
338
1.5, indicating an overall stoichiometry of approximately 1.5 cysteine molecules per 1O2. At pH
339
5.0, 1O2 phosphorescence was not depressed upon addition of Cys, which indicated no 1O2-
340
mediated reaction of Cys0 and was in accordance with the result of the steady-state experiments.
−
to different stoichiometry on the different
341
Reaction rate constant of Cys with hydroxyl radical. The previously reported diffusion-
342
controlled bimolecular reaction rate constant (1.8 × 1010 M–1s–1) was adapted for the reaction of
343
•OH with both Cys0 and Cys– in this study (Table 1).63
344
Reaction rate constants of Cys with hydrogen peroxide. The H2O2-mediated Cys HO increased from pH kCys,rxn
345
transformation rate constants were highly pH-dependent (Figure S3):
346
5.0 to pH 9.8, indicating higher reactivity of Cys- with H2O2 than Cys0. Above pH 9.8,
347
decreased with increasing solution pH, indicating that the reactivity may also be modulated by
348
the protonation state of N-terminal amine (pKa2 = 10.28). Previous work suggests that hydrogen
349
bonding between the protonated amine in Cys and H2O2 takes place, which may consequently
350
reduce the electron density in H2O2 and promote the reactivity of H2O2 as an electrophile
351
towards Cys.64 At high pH, deprotonation of the N-terminal amine suppresses hydrogen bond
352
formation and lowers the reaction rate of Cys2- with H2O2. The reaction rate constants of Cys0,
2
2
HO kCys,rxn 2
2
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353
Cys-, and Cys2- with H2O2 were obtained from the fit of experimental rate constants (Table 1,
354
Equation 13) and agreed with previous work.64
355
Reaction rate constants of Cys with triplet state sensitizers. The photochemical
356
transformation rate constants of Cys with model excited triplet state sensitizers (3Sens*) were
357
assessed by transient absorption spectroscopy (Figure S1). The quenching rate constants of
358
3
Sens* by Cys- varied from 5.0 × 108 to 1.4 × 109 M–1s–1, with varying redox potentials of
359
3
Sens* (Table S1).38,65-71 Comparatively, no clear quenching of 3Sens* by Cys0 was observed
360
(Table 1), indicating the rate constants were ≤ 2.2 × 106 M–1s–1.
361
Contribution of individual PPRI-mediated transformation pathway to Cys oxidation in
362
irradiated CDOM solutions. In the previous sections, the Cys transformation rate constants
363
with individual PPRI were established over a wide range of solution pH. Based on these results,
364
we investigated the formation of PPRI in irradiated CDOM solutions and sought to evaluate the
365
CDOM contribution of each transformation pathway (e.g., kCys,obs ,
366
in irradiated CDOM solutions (Equation 20). The processes that are not attributable to 1O2,
367
H2O2, •OH and dark reactions are combined into a single pseudo-first-order rate constant,
dark
CDOM light
CDOM dark
1
O2
•OH
1
•OH
2
H 2O 2
Other
kCys,obs = k Cys,obs + kCys + kCys + k Cys + k Cys 368
H2O2
kCysO , kCys , kCys
) to Cys oxidation
Other
kCys
.
()
Singlet oxygen-mediated Cys phototransformation in CDOM solutions. The contribution of
369
1
370
because of the reactivity of Cys with 1O2 and 1O2 formation in CDOM solutions were dependent
371
on solution pH. UVA- and sunlight-irradiation of SRNOM yielded similar steady-state 1O2
372
concentrations, which decreased with increasing solution pH. Comparatively, the [1O2]ss in
O2 to the photooxidation of Cys during CDOM photolysis varied across experimental pH
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373
PPHA-sensitized experiments was highly dependent on the light source. The measured [1O2]ss in
374
PPHA-sensitized experiments was 2- to 4-fold higher than [1O2]ss in SRNOM-sensitized
375
O experiments (Table 2). In both CDOM solutions, kCys increased with solution pH, despite the
376
O lower [1O2]ss at high pH. In SRNOM solutions, kCys on average contributed around 4.3% and 3.3%
377
of the Cys oxidation under UVA and sunlight irradiations, respectively (Table 2). The
378
contribution increased as solution pH increased from 5.7 to 9.9. In PPHA solutions, the
379
contribution of 1O2 reactions were higher, which on average accounted for 7.8% and 11.0% of
380
Cys oxidation under UVA and sunlight irradiation, respectively.
1
2
1
2
381
The involvement of 1O2 in Cys oxidation in CDOM solutions was further probed through the
382
use of azide (N3-) as a 1O2 quencher under UVA irradiation at varying pH ranging from 5.7 to
383
9.9 (SI, Section S3). Approximately 65% of [1O2]ss was quenched upon addition of 1 mM N3-.
384
The Cys transformation rates decreased along with observed lower [1O2]ss, suggesting the
385
involvement of
386
transformation to Cys oxidation were estimated to be 35% and 33% on average during SRNOM-
387
and PPHA-sensitized photolysis, respectively (Table S3). Notably, the contributions of 1O2
388
predicted from 1O2 quenching experiments were significantly higher than the 1O2 contributions
389
obtained above (i.e., 4.3 % and 7.8 % in SRNOM and PPHA solutions, respectively). These
390
results indicate that in addition to 1O2, azide may also quench other PPRI (e.g., •OH), which are
391
involved in Cys photooxidation transformations during CDOM-sensitized experiments.
1
O2 in Cys oxidation (Table S2). The contributions of
1
O2-mediated
392
Hydroxyl radical-mediated Cys phototransformation in CDOM solutions. The •OH-
393
mediated Cys photooxidation rates varied little across measured solution pH. The steady-state
394
concentrations of •OH ([•OH]ss) were low relative to other PPRI concentrations (Table 2). In
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395
both CDOM solutions, sunlight irradiation produced higher [ • OH]ss than UVA irradiation.
396
Higher [•OH]ss were observed in PPHA solutions than in SRNOM solutions (Table 2). Despite
397
•OH the low steady-state concentrations, •OH-mediated phototransformation rates ( kCys ) were
398
significant due to the diffusion-controlled reactivity of •OH with Cys0 and Cys- (Figure S3).
399
Notably, •OH-mediated phototransformation was more important at low solution pH (i.e., at pH
400
•OH 5.7), where Cys0 reacted with other PPRI at relatively slow rates. The contribution of kCys
401
decreased with increasing solution pH. For instance, the •OH contribution decreased from 4.4%
402
at pH 5.7 to 1.6% at pH 9.9 in UVA irradiated SRNOM solutions (Table 2). Overall, •OH-
403
mediated phototransformation had minor importance on Cys oxidation in irradiated CDOM
404
solutions.
405
Hydrogen peroxide-mediated Cys phototransformation in CDOM solutions. The
406
contribution of H2O2-mediated Cys photooxidation during CDOM-sensitized photolysis was
407
strongly pH-dependent. The photochemical formation rate of H2O2 was investigated in only the
408
HO UVA irradiated system. The results show that kCys increased rapidly with increasing solution
409
HO pH, giving higher H2O2 formation rates at higher pH (Table 2). For instance, kCys increased by
410
HO over 2 orders of magnitude from pH 5.7 to pH 9.9 and hence, the contribution of kCys to Cys
411
HO oxidation increased from 0.15% to 7.1% in SRNOM solutions. At pH 7.3, kCys contributed to
412
0.58% and 1.2% of Cys oxidation in SRNOM and PPHA solutions, respectively. These results
413
suggest that H2O2-mediated phototransformation pathway had minor importance on Cys
414
oxidation in irradiated CDOM solutions.
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
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415
Cys phototransformation in CDOM solutions via other pathways. The contributions of 1O2,
416
•OH, and H2O2 to Cys photooxidation in CDOM-sensitized experiments from the discussions
417
above were estimated on the basis of measured rate constants and measured steady-state
418
concentrations of individual PPRI. This section addresses other processes, collectively referred
419
to as
420
varied depending on solution pH and light source. Yet the trends of
421
independent of light or CDOM, which generally increased with increasing solution pH (Table 2).
Other
kCys
that may contribute to Cys phototransformation (Equation 20). The values of
The contribution of 3CDOM*-mediated oxidation to
422
Other
kCys
Other
kCys
Other
kCys
with pH are
was assessed using multiple
423
approaches. Generally, the first-order kinetics were expected for 3CDOM*-mediated oxidation
424
because molecular oxygen was the major quencher for
425
concentration of 3CDOM* was not affected by addition of Cys. Based on this assumption, we
426
first estimated the correlation of
427
TMP as a reference compound. TMP has been previously employed as a reference compound for
428
3
CDOM* reactivity.72-76 These estimates were not used to directly calculate the contribution of
429
3
CDOM*-mediated oxidation but were rather used for assessing whether 3CDOM* is a major
430
contributor to
431
CDOM* 0.66) with the pseudo-first-order degradation rate constant of TMP ( kTMP,obs ), indicating that
432
3
Other
kCys
Other
kCys
3
CDOM* and the steady-state
with 3CDOM*-mediated Cys photooxidation rates using
. The results show that
Other
kCys
3
Other CDOM* had a correlation ( kCys / kTMP,obs =1.01, r2 = 3
CDOM*-mediated pathway in Cys phototransformation was plausible (Figure S7).
433
Nevertheless, uncertainty may exist using TMP as a reference compound because Cys has
434
lower reactivity towards 3CDOM* than TMP. We used triplet state model ketones (3Sens*) as
435
representative 3CDOM* and compared the reactivity of TMP and Cys with 3Sens*. The
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436
quenching rate constants of 3Sens* with TMP varied from 5.9 × 108 to 43 × 108 M–1s–1, which
437
were higher than the values of Cys (5.0 - 14.0 × 108 M-1 s-1, Table S1). More notably, the ratio
438
of the rate constants for TMP and Cys oxidation by the five model triplet ketones varied from
439
1.2 to 5.4, indicating that assuming a simple reactivity ratio between the two compounds is likely
440
not valid. Finally, while the model triplet ketones showed high reactivity with the thiolate form,
441
Cys-, they showed very slow kinetics with the thiol form, Cys0. This was not mirrored in the
442
kCys
Other
values, which had substantial contributions over the entire experimental pH range.
443
The reactivity of Cys and TMP towards 3CDOM* was further studied via monitoring 1O2
444
phosphorescence in SRNOM solutions. The concentration of 3CDOM* was greatly depressed by
445
addition of TMP, resulting in depressed 1O2 formation. Comparatively, we observed constant
446
1
447
by Cys (Figure S8). Additional evidence against significant contribution of 3CDOM*-mediated
448
transformation came from deceased Cys transformation rates in N2-sparged CDOM solutions,
449
where the steady-state concentration of 3CDOM* was enhanced (Figure S9). This result is
450
consistent with 3CDOM*-mediated transformation being only a minor contributor to Cys
451
photooxidation. It is however not conclusive evidence, since there are mechanisms initiated by
452
triplet sensitizers that are slowed by oxygen removal, such as oxygen-dependent radical chain
453
processes.
O2 formation upon Cys addition in SRNOM solution, indicating minor quenching of 3CDOM*
454
It thus appears that processes other than reaction with 1O2, •OH, and H2O2 are responsible for
455
the majority of the indirect phototransformation of Cys and that 3CDOM* is not the main
456
contributor to these other processes that are represented by
457
these other processes are reaction with an unidentified oxidant (e.g., peroxy radicals) and/or
Other . kCys
The leading candidates for
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458
photo-initiated reactions between Cys and CDOM. Identifying the major processes responsible
459
for CDOM-sensitized degradation of Cys remains a need for future work.
460
Environmental implications. This study establishes that abiotic transformation processes,
461
both photochemical and non-photochemical, are expected to be an important sink of Cys in
462
surface waters. We expect that the susceptibility of Cys to abiotic transformations also applies to
463
other Cys-containing biomolecules, such as glutathione, phytochelatins and enzymes, which act
464
as powerful antioxidants and chelators for microorganisms experiencing oxidative stress and
465
toxic metal stress.31,77-79 These Cys-containing biomolecules are not only intracellular, but also
466
are released into the extracellular environment and detected in the bulk solution of
467
environmental aquatic systems.1-4 While quantifying the transformations of these structurally
468
diverse Cys-containing biomolecules might be challenging, this mechanistic study on free Cys
469
lays an important foundation for that work. An assessment of Cys reactivity in structurally
470
higher order biomolecules is currently being addressed in ongoing work.
471
The rapid photochemical and non-photochemical transformation processes significantly
472
depress the steady-state concentrations of thiols, which provides an explanation for the observed
473
low concentrations of thiol compounds in the oxic water column.80 Compared to the slow biotic
474
removal rate constants (~10-5-10-6 s-1, phytochelatin as example),77 the rate constants of abiotic
475
non-photochemical transformation (~10-5 s-1) or photochemical transformation (~10-3 s-1) are
476
substantially higher in CDOM solutions. Further studies are needed for a full understanding of
477
concurrent abiotic and biotic processes of individual thiol species in natural waters.
478
The depressed thiol concentrations resulting from abiotic transformation have profound
479
impacts on numerous environmental processes, for instance, metal cycling. The speciation,
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480
transportation, transformation, and bioavailability of soft metals (e.g., Hg, Cu, Zn, Cd, and Pb)
481
in aquatic systems are largely dependent on complexation with thiols. Soft metals complexed
482
with either thiol or thiol oxidantion products (e.g, disulfide) vary greatly in their stability
483
constants81 and biogeochemical properties. Thus, organisms that use thiols to control free metal
484
concentrations in natural waters must cope with the higher reactivity and lower lifetime of these
485
thiols under photochemical conditions.
486
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487
Supporting Information Available
488
Supporting figures, tables, detailed experimental methods and additional experiments described
489
within the manuscript are provided. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at
490
http://pubs.acs.org.
491
Acknowledgements
492
This work was financially supported by grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation
493
(Project numbers 200021_138008 and 200020_159809). We thank Prof. Heileen Hsu-Kim
494
(Duke University) for helpful discussions regarding this study.
495
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496
0.8 Absorbance
2.0
UVA
1.5
PPHA
0.6 1.0 0.4
SRNOM sunlight 0.5
0.2 Cys- Cys0
0.0 250
497 498 499 500
300
350 400 450 Wavelength (nm)
0.0 500
Light intensity (10-6 Es L-1s-1)
1.0
Figure 1. (Left y-axis) Absorbance spectra of Cys0 (40 µM at pH 5.7), Cys- (40 µM at pH 9.9), PPHA (11.4 mgC/L at pH 7.3), and SRNOM (11.4 mgC/L at pH 7.3). (Right y-axis) Intensity of UVA and natural sunlight.
501
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502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513
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Figure 2. (a) Photochemical and non-photochemical transformation kinetics of Cys in CDOM solutions at pH 5.7-9.9 (showing UV-A irradiated SRNOM solutions as example). The natural logarithm of the ratio of Cys concentration at time point t and initial concentration, ln([Cys]t/[Cys]0), was plotted versus photolysis time. (b) Dark transformation rates (units of s–1) of Cys in SRNOM solutions at 15 °C (red triangle), SRNOM solutions at 32 °C (green dot), PPHA solutions at 15 °C (cyan square), and PPHA solutions at 32 °C (blue diamond). (c) Phototransformation rate (units of s–1) of Cys in UVA-irradiated SRNOM solutions (red triangle), sunlight-irradiated SRNOM solutions (green dot), UVA-irradiated PPHA solutions (cyan square), and sunlight-irradiated PPHA solutions (blue diamond). The observed rates in panel (b) and (c) at different pH values are connected to show the tendency of rates over pH (solid lines). Note that the scale of the y-axis in panel c covers a 80-fold larger range than in panel b.
514
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515 516 517
Figure 3. Schematic overview of Cys phototransformation and product formations in irradiated CDOM solutions.
518
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519
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Table 1. Reaction rate constants (units of M–1s–1) of Cys with PPRI. Rate constants (M-1s-1)
520
PPRI
1
521 522 523
O2 (steady-state)