Abstract

In this paper we describe an anaerobic titrator made virtually from glass with a small amount of high vacuum epoxy mounted directly to a quartz EPR tube. A complete titration may be carried out with as little as 600 μl of sample. This cell features the anaerobic manipulation of an electrochemically poised solution from an electrochemical pouch to an EPR tube. The cell uses a gold foil working electrode and Ag AgCl reference and counter electrodes. The reference and counter electrodes are isolated from the sample by leached Vycor glass. In the work reported here, we used this cell to determine the equilibrium redox potential of methyl viologen in an EPR titration. With methyl viologen as an indicator we found that the cell has a residual oxygen level of 1.5 μ m with a leak rate of 0.005 nmol/min. After moving the solution into the EPR tube, freezing, performing EPR, and thawing, the potential of the methyl viologen solution drifted only 2 mV. During the titration, the poised potentials were stable, drifting only 1 mV/min. Formal potentials as low as −630 mV in a vitamin B 12-type protein have been determined with this cell (S. R. Harder, W.-P. Lu, B. A. Feinberg, and S. W. Ragsdale (1989) Biochemistry, in press) .

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