Abstract

Current understanding of dissolved iron (Fe) speciation in the ocean is based on two fundamentally different approaches: electrochemical methods that measure bulk properties of a heterogeneous ligand pool and liquid chromatography mass spectrometry methods that characterize ligands at a molecular level. Here, we describe a method for simultaneously determining Fe-ligand dissociation rate constants (kd) of suites of naturally occurring ligands in seawater by monitoring the exchange of ligand-bound 56Fe with 57Fe using liquid chromatography-inductively coupled mass spectrometry. Values of kd were determined for solutions of ferrichrome and ferrioxamine E. In seawater, the dissociation rate constant of ferrichrome (kd = 10 × 10-8 s-1) was greater than that of ferrioxamine E (kd = 3.6 × 10-8 s-1). The rates for both compounds were over twice as fast in seawater compared with pure water, suggesting that seawater salts accelerate dissociation. Isotope exchange experiments on organic extracts of natural seawater indicated that ligand-binding sites associated with chromatographically unresolved dissolved organic matter exchanged Fe more quickly (kd = 1.8 × 10-5 s-1) than amphibactin siderophores (kd = 2.15 × 10-6 s-1) and an unidentified siderophore with m/z 709 (kd = 9.6 × 10-6 s-1). These findings demonstrate that our approach can bridge molecular-level ligand identification with kinetic and thermodynamic metal-binding properties.

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