The carbonyl functionality of natural organic matter
(NOM) is poorly
constrained. Here, we treated Suwannee River NOM (SRNOM) with ammonium
acetate and sodium cyanoborohydride to convert ketone-containing compounds
by reductive amination to their corresponding primary amines. The
total dissolved nitrogen content increased by up to 275% after amination.
Up to 30% of the molecular formulas of SRNOM contained isomers with
ketone functionalities as detected by ultrahigh-resolution mass spectrometry.
Most of these isomers contained one or two keto groups. At least 3.5%
of the oxygen in SRNOM was bound in ketone moieties. The conversion
of reacted compounds increased linearly with O/H values of molecular
formulas and was predictable from the elemental composition. The mean
conversion rate of reacted compounds nearly followed a log-normal
distribution. This distribution and the predictability of the proportion
of ketone-containing isomers solely based on the molecular formula
indicated a stochastic distribution of ketones across SRNOM compounds.
We obtained isotopically labeled amines by using 15N-labeled
ammonium acetate, facilitating the identification of reaction products
and enabling NMR spectroscopic analysis. 1H,15N HSQC NMR experiments of derivatized samples containing less than
20 μg of nitrogen confirmed the predominant formation of primary
amines, as expected from the reaction pathway.