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1.
Chi Y  Chen J  Aoki K 《Inorganic chemistry》2004,43(26):8437-8446
Electrochemical generation of free nitric oxide (NO) from nitrite (NO(2)(-)) catalyzed by iron meso-tetrakis(4-N-methylpyridiniumyl)porphyrin, [Fe(III)(TMPyP)](5+), has been developed in this study. To obtain free NO, a cathodic electrolysis and an anodic electrolysis were performed in two connected flow electrolytic cells in sequence. The flow electrolytic cell upstream was used for cathodic electrolysis, where the solution of [Fe(III)(TMPyP)](5+) and NO(2)(-) was reduced at -0.25 V (vs Ag/AgCl) into [Fe(II)(NO(2)(-))(2)(TMPyP)](2+) and [Fe(II)(NO)(TMPyP)](4+) in sequence. The flow electrolytic cell downstream was utilized for anodic electrolysis, where [Fe(II)(NO)(TMPyP)](4+) formed from the upstream cell was oxidized at +0.40 V (vs Ag/AgCl) into [Fe(III)(TMPyP)](5+) and free NO. Finally, NO was bubbled out from anodic electrolyte by argon gas. The mechanism and the optimum conditions for electrochemical generation of NO from NO(2)(-) catalyzed by [Fe(III)(TMPyP)](5+) were studied in detail by voltammetric and spectroelectrochemical methods.  相似文献   

2.
Two iron–nitrosyl–porphyrins, nitrosyl[meso‐tetrakis(3,4,5‐trimethoxyphenylporphyrin]iron(II) acetic acid solvate ( 3 ) and nitrosyl[meso‐tetrakis(4‐methoxyphenylporphyrin]iron(II) CH2Cl2 solvate ( 4 ), were synthesized in quantitative yield by using a modified procedure with nitrous acid, followed by oxygen‐atom abstraction by triphenylphosphine under an argon atmosphere. These nitrosyl porphyrins are in the {FeNO}7 class. Under an argon atmosphere, these compounds are relatively stable over a broad range of pH values (4–8) but, under aerobic conditions, they release nitric oxide faster at high pH values than that at low pH values. The generated nitric‐oxide‐free iron(III)–porphyrin can be re‐nitrosylated by using nitrous acid and triphenylphosphine. The rapid release of NO from these FeII complexes at high pH values seems to be similar to that in nitrophorin, a nitric‐oxide‐transport protein, which formally possesses FeIII. However, because the release of NO occurs from ferrous–nitrosyl–porphyrin under aerobic conditions, these compounds are more closely related to nitrobindin, a recently discovered heme protein.  相似文献   

3.
The reaction of the water-soluble Fe(III)(TMPS) porphyrin with CN(-) in basic solution leads to the stepwise formation of Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(H(2)O) and Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(2). The kinetics of the reaction of CN(-) with Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(H(2)O) was studied as a function of temperature and pressure. The positive value of the activation volume for the formation of Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(2) is consistent with the operation of a dissociatively activated mechanism and confirms the six-coordinate nature of the monocyano complex. A good agreement between the rate constants at pH 8 and 9 for the formation of the dicyano complex implies the presence of water in the axial position trans to coordinated cyanide in the monocyano complex and eliminates the existence of Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(OH) under the selected reaction conditions. Both Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(H(2)O) and Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(2) bind nitric oxide (NO) to form the same nitrosyl complex, namely, Fe(II)(TMPS)(CN)(NO(+)). Kinetic studies indicate that nitrosylation of Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(2) follows a limiting dissociative mechanism that is supported by the independence of the observed rate constant on [NO] at an appropriately high excess of NO, and the positive values of both the activation parameters ΔS(?) and ΔV(?) found for the reaction under such conditions. The relatively small first-order rate constant for NO binding, namely, (1.54 ± 0.01) × 10(-2) s(-1), correlates with the rate constant for CN(-) release from the Fe(III)(TMPS)(CN)(2) complex, namely, (1.3 ± 0.2) × 10(-2) s(-1) at 20 °C, and supports the proposed nitrosylation mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
The polyanionic, water-soluble, and non-micro-oxo dimer-forming iron porphyrin (hexadecasodium iron 54,104,154,204-tetra-t-butyl-52,56,102,106,152,156,202,206-octakis[2,2-bis(carboxylato)ethyl]-5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin), (P16-)FeIII, with 16 negatively charged meso substituents on the porphyrin was synthesized and fully characterized by UV-vis and 1H NMR spectroscopy. A single pKa1 value of 9.90 +/- 0.01 was determined for the deprotonation of coordinated water in the six-coordinate (P16-)FeIII(H2O)2 and as attributed to the formation of the five-coordinate monohydroxo-ligated form, (P16-)FeIII(OH). The porphyrin complex reversibly binds NO in aqueous solution to yield the nitric oxide adduct, (P16-)FeII(NO+)(L), where L = H2O or OH-. The kinetics for the reversible binding of NO were studied as a function of pH, temperature, and pressure using the stopped-flow technique. The data for the binding of NO to the diaqua complex are consistent with the operation of a dissociative mechanism on the basis of the significantly positive values of DeltaS and DeltaV, whereas the monohydroxo complex favors an associatively activated mechanism as determined from the corresponding negative activation parameters. The rate constant, kon = 3.1 x 104 M-1 s-1 at 25 degrees C, determined for the NO binding to (P16-)FeIII(OH) at higher pH, is significantly lower than the corresponding value measured for (P16-)FeIII(H2O)2 at lower pH, namely, kon = 11.3 x 105 M-1 s-1 at 25 degrees C. This decrease in the reactivity is analogous to that reported for other diaqua- and monohydroxo-ligated ferric porphyrin complexes, and is accounted for in terms of a mechanistic changeover observed for (P16-)FeIII(H2O)2 and (P16-)FeIII(OH). The formed nitrosyl complex, (P16-)FeII(NO+)(H2O), undergoes subsequent reductive nitrosylation to produce (P16-)FeII(NO), which is catalyzed by nitrite produced during the reaction. Concentration-, pH-, temperature-, and pressure-dependent kinetic data are reported for this reaction. Data for the reversible binding of NO and the subsequent reductive nitrosylation reaction are discussed in reference to that available for other iron(III) porphyrins in terms of the influence of the porphyrin periphery.  相似文献   

5.
The reaction(s) of nitric oxide (nitrogen monoxide) gas with sublimed layers containing the nitrato iron(III) complex Fe(III)(TPP)(eta(2)-O(2)NO) (1, TPP = meso-tetraphenyl porphyrinate(2)(-)) leads to formation of several iron porphyrin species that are ligated by various nitrogen oxides. The eventual products of these low-temperature solid-state reactions are the nitrosyl complex Fe(TPP)(NO), the nitro-nitrosyl complex Fe(TPP)(NO(2))(NO), and 1 itself, and the relative final quantities of these were functions of the NO partial pressure. It is particularly notable that isotope labeling experiments show that the nitrato product is not simply unreacted 1 but is the result of a series of transformations taking place in the layered material. Thus, the nitrato complex formed from solid Fe(TPP)(eta(2)-O(2)NO) maintained under a (15)NO atmosphere was found to be the labeled analogue Fe(TPP)(eta(2)-O(2)(15)NO). The reactivities of the layered solids are compared to the behaviors of the same species in ambient temperature solutions. To interpret the reactions of the labeled nitrogen oxides, the potential exchange reactions between N(2)O(3) and (15)NO were examined, and complete isotope scrambling was observed between these species under the reaction conditions (T = 140 K). Overall it was concluded from isotope labeling experiments that the sequence of reactions is initiated by reaction of 1 with NO to give the nitrato nitrosyl complex Fe(TPP)(eta(1)-ONO(2))(NO) (2) as an intermediate. This is followed by a reaction in the presence of excess NO that is equivalent to the loss of the nitrate radical NO(3)(*)( )()to give Fe(TPP)(NO) as another transient species. A plausible pathway involving NO attack on the coordinated nitrate of 2 resulting in the release of N(2)O(4) concerted with electron transfer to the metal center is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
The water-soluble, non-mu-oxo dimer-forming porphyrin, [5,10,15,20-tetrakis-4'-t-butylphenyl-2',6'-bis-(N-methylene-(4'-t-butylpyridinium))porphyrinato]iron(III) octabromide, (P(8+))Fe(III), with eight positively charged substituents in the ortho positions of the phenyl rings, was characterized by UV-vis and 1H NMR spectroscopy and 17O NMR water-exchange studies in aqueous solution. Spectrophotometric titrations of (P(8+))Fe(III) indicated a pKa1 value of 5.0 for coordinated water in (P(8+))Fe(III)(H2O)2. The monohydroxo-ligated (P(8+))Fe(III)(OH)(H2O) formed at 5 < pH < 12 has a weakly bound water molecule that undergoes an exchange reaction, k(ex) = 2.4 x 10(6) s(-1), significantly faster than water exchange on (P(8+))Fe(III)(H2O)2, viz. k(ex) = 5.5 x 10(4) s(-1) at 25 degrees C. The porphyrin complex reacts with nitric oxide to yield the nitrosyl adduct, (P(8+))Fe(II)(NO+)(L) (L = H2O or OH-). The diaqua-ligated (P(8+))Fe(III)(H2O)2 binds and releases NO according to a dissociatively activated mechanism, analogous to that reported earlier for other (P)Fe(III)(H2O)2 complexes. Coordination of NO to (P(8+))Fe(III)(OH)(H2O) at high pH follows an associative mode, as evidenced by negative deltaS(double dagger)(on) and deltaV(double dagger)(on) values measured for this reaction. The observed ca. 10-fold decrease in the NO binding rate on going from six-coordinate (P(8+))Fe(III)(H2O)2 (k(on) = 15.1 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1)) to (P(8+))Fe(III)(OH)(H2O) (k(on) = 1.56 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1) at 25 degrees C) is ascribed to the different nature of the rate-limiting step for NO binding at low and high pH, respectively. The results are compared with data reported for other water-soluble iron(III) porphyrins with positively and negatively charged meso substituents. Influence of the porphyrin periphery on the dynamics of reversible NO binding to these (P)Fe(III) complexes as a function of pH is discussed on the basis of available experimental data.  相似文献   

7.
Reductive nitrosylation and complexation of ammonium pertechnetate by acetohydroxamic acid has been achieved in aqueous nitric and perchloric acid solutions. The kinetics of the reaction depend on the relative concentrations of the reaction components and are accelerated at higher temperatures. The reaction does not occur unless conditions are acidic. Analysis of the X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopic data is consistent with a pseudo-octahedral geometry and the linear Tc-N-O bond typical of technetium nitrosyl compounds, and electron spin resonance spectroscopy is consistent with a d (5) Tc(II) nitrosyl complex. The nitrosyl source is generally AHA, but it may be augmented by some products of the reaction with nitric acid. The resulting low-valency trans-aquonitrosyl(diacetohydroxamic)-technetium(II) complex ([Tc (II)(NO)(AHA) 2H 2O] (+), 1) is highly soluble in water, extremely hydrophilic, and is not extracted by tri- n-butylphosphate in a dodecane diluent. Its extraction properties are not pH-dependent: potentiometric-spectrophotometric titration studies indicate a single species from pH 4 down to -0.6 (calculated). This molecule is resistant to oxidation by H 2O 2, even at high pH, and can undergo substitution to form other technetium nitrosyl complexes. The potential formation of 1 during reprocessing may strongly impact the fate of technetium in the nuclear fuel cycle.  相似文献   

8.
The reductive nitrosylation (Fe(III)(P) + 2NO + H(2)O = Fe(II)(P)(NO) + NO(2)(-) + 2H(+)) of the ferriheme model Fe(III)(TPPS) (TPPS = tetra(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrinato) has been investigated in moderately acidic solution. In the absence of added or adventitious nitrite, this reaction displays general base catalysis with several buffers in aqueous solutions. It was also found that the nitrite ion, NO(2)(-), is a catalyst for this reaction. Similar nitrite catalysis was demonstrated for another ferriheme model system Fe(III)(TMPy) (TMPy = meso-tetrakis(N-methyl-4-pyridyl)porphyrinato), and for ferriheme proteins met-hemoglobin (metHb) and met-myoglobin (metMb) in aqueous buffer solutions. Thus, it appears that such catalysis is a general mechanistic route to the reductive nitrosylation products. Two nitrite catalysis mechanisms are proposed. In the first, NO(2)(-) is visualized as operating via nucleophilic addition to the Fe(III)-coordinated NO in a manner similar to the reactions proposed for Fe(III) reduction promoted by other nucleophiles. This would give a labile N(2)O(3) ligand that hydrolyzes to nitrous acid, regenerating the original nitrite. The other proposal is that Fe(III) reduction is effected by direct outer-sphere electron transfer from NO(2)(-) to Fe(III)(P)(NO) to give nitrogen dioxide plus the ferrous nitrosyl complex Fe(II)(P)(NO). The NO(2) thus generated would be trapped by excess NO to give N(2)O(3) and, subsequently, nitrite. It is found that the nitrite catalysis rates are markedly sensitive to the respective Fe(III)(P)(NO) reduction potentials, which is consistent with the behavior expected for an outer-sphere electron-transfer mechanism. Nitrite is the product of NO autoxidation in aqueous solution and is a ubiquitous impurity in experiments where aqueous NO is added to an aerobic system to study biological effects. The present results demonstrate that such an impurity should not be assumed to be innocuous, especially in the context of recent reports that endogenous nitrite may play physiological roles relevant to the interactions of NO and ferriheme proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Bleomycin (Blm) is an antitumor agent that requires iron and oxygen for strand cleavage of DNA. In this study, ferric bleomycin, Fe(III)Blm, or the nitric oxide adduct of ferrous bleomycin, ON-Fe(II)Blm, were bound to one-dimensionally oriented DNA fibers. Reductive nitrosylation of Fe(III) complexes took place in situ on B-form DNA fibers. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra were obtained as a function of the angle phi between the magnetic field B and the fiber axis Zf. For comparison, EPR spectra were acquired for ON-Fe(II)TMpyP and ON-Fe(II)TMpyP-Im on oriented DNA fibers, where TMpyP is 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(1-methyl-4-pyridino)porphyrin and Im is imidazole. EPR spectra showed both low-spin Fe(III)Blm and ON-Fe(II)Blm bound to B-form DNA in two slightly different binding orientations in the ratio of 1:0.2. With A-form DNA, a fraction of bound Fe(III)Blm was high spin. Specifically, the angle beta between the fiber axis Zf and the g axis, gz, perpendicular to or nearly perpendicular to the equatorial plane of the iron complex was estimated as 20 degrees and 25 degrees for ON-Fe(II)Blm and 30 degrees and 25 degrees for Fe(III)Blm, respectively. The angle gamma that determines the orientation of gx and gy axes was estimated as 90 degrees for the two ON-Fe(II)Blm species and 10 degrees for the two Fe(III)Blm species, respectively. The NO was held rigidly in place as the temperature increased from 123 K to room temperature for ON-Fe(II)Blm but not for ON-Fe(II)TMpyP or ON-Fe(II)TMpyP-Im. It is hypothesized that the NO is structurally oriented by hydrogen bonding like the peroxide is held in HO2(-)-Co(III)Blm (Wu et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1996, 118, 1281-1294). The EPR parameters are consistent with a six-coordinate complex for ON-Fe(II)Blm, although the superhyperfine structure from the trans nitrogen was not detected. The increase in g value anisotropy upon binding ON-Fe(II)Blm to DNA fiber may be caused by an increase in the overlap of d pi and 2p pi* orbitals induced by an interaction of NO with DNA and/or by a perturbation of d orbitals due to the pyrimidine-guanine interaction. It is concluded that the EPR parameters of ON-Fe(II)Blm and Fe(III)Blm bound to oriented DNA support the hypothesis that FeBlm species bind to DNA with adduct structures similar to those formed by related CoBlm species and DNA.  相似文献   

10.
Detailed experimental studies are described for reactions of several nitrogen oxides with iron porphyrin models for heme/NxOy systems. It is shown by FTIR and optical spectroscopy and by isotope labeling experiments that reaction of small increments of NO2 with sublimed thin layers of the iron(II) complex Fe(Por) (Por = meso-tetraphenylporphyrinato dianion, TPP, or meso-tetra-p-tolylporphyrinato dianion, TTP) leads to formation of the 5-coordinate nitrito complexes Fe(Por)(eta1-ONO) (1), which are fairly stable but very slowly decompose under vacuum giving mostly the corresponding nitrosyl complexes Fe(Por)(NO). Further reaction of 1 with new NO2 increments leads to formation of the nitrato complex Fe(Por)(eta2-O2NO) (2). The interaction of NO with 1 at low temperature involves ligand addition to give the nitrito-nitrosyl complexes Fe(Por)(eta1-ONO)(NO) (3); however, these isomerize to the nitro-nitrosyl analogs Fe(Por)(eta1-NO2)(NO) (4) upon warming. Experiments with labeled nitrogen oxides argue for an intramolecular isomerization ("flipping") mechanism rather than one involving dissociation and rebinding of NO2. The Fe(III) centers in the 6-coordinate species 3 and 4 are low spin in contrast to 1, which appears to be high-spin, although DFT computations of the porphinato models Fe(P)(nitrite) suggest that the doublet nitro species and the quartet and sextet nitrito complexes are all relatively close in energy. The nitro-nitrosyl complex 4 is stable under an NO atmosphere but decomposes under intense pumping to give a mixture of the ferrous nitrosyl complex Fe(Por)(NO) and the ferric nitrito complex Fe(Por)(eta1-ONO) indicating the competitive dissociation of NO and NO2. Hence, loss of NO from 4 is accompanied with nitro --> nitrito isomerization consistent with 1 being the more stable of the 5-coordinate NO2 complexes of iron porphyrins.  相似文献   

11.
The polyanionic water-soluble and non-mu-oxo-dimer-forming iron porphyrin iron(III) 5(4),10(4),15(4),20(4)-tetra-tert-butyl-5(2),5(6),15(2),15(6)-tetrakis[2,2-bis(carboxylato)ethyl]-5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin, (P(8-))Fe(III) (1), was synthesized as an octasodium salt by applying well-established porphyrin and organic chemistry procedures to bromomethylated precursor porphyrins and characterized by standard techniques such as UV-vis and (1)H NMR spectroscopy. A single pK(a1) value of 9.26 was determined for the deprotonation of coordinated water in (P(8-))Fe(III)(H(2)O)(2) (1-H(2)()O) present in aqueous solution at pH <9. The porphyrin complex reversibly binds NO in aqueous solution to give the mononitrosyl adduct, (P(8-))Fe(II)(NO(+))(L), where L = H(2)O or OH(-). The kinetics of the binding and release of NO was studied as a function of pH, temperature, and pressure by stopped-flow and laser flash photolysis techniques. The diaqua-ligated form of the porphyrin complex binds and releases NO according to a dissociative interchange mechanism based on the positive values of the activation parameters DeltaS() and DeltaV() for the "on" and "off" reactions. The rate constant k(on) = 6.2 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) (24 degrees C), determined for NO binding to the monohydroxo-ligated (P(8-))Fe(III)(OH) (1-OH) present in solution at pH >9, is markedly lower than the corresponding value measured for 1-H(2)O at lower pH (k(on) = 8.2 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), 24 degrees C, pH 7). The observed decrease in the reactivity is contradictory to that expected for the diaqua- and monohydroxo-ligated forms of the iron(III) complex and is accounted for in terms of a mechanistic changeover observed for 1-H(2)O and 1-OH in their reactions with NO. The mechanistic interpretation offered is further substantiated by the results of water-exchange studies performed on the polyanionic porphyrin complex as a function of pH, temperature, and pressure.  相似文献   

12.
The reactions of nitric oxide and carbon monoxide with water soluble iron and cobalt porphyrin complexes were investigated over the temperature range 298-318 K and the hydrostatic pressure range 0.1-250 MPa [porphyrin ligands: TPPS = tetra-meso-(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphinate and TMPS = tetra-meso-(sulfonatomesityl)porphinate]. Large and positive DeltaS(double dagger) and DeltaV(double dagger) values were observed for NO binding to and release from iron(III) complexes Fe(III)(TPPS) and Fe(III)(TMPS) consistent with a dissociative ligand exchange mechanism where the lability of coordinated water dominates the reactivity with NO. Small positive values for Delta and Delta for the fast reactions of NO with the iron(II) and cobalt(II) analogues (k(on) = 1.5 x 10(9) and 1.9 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) for Fe(II)(TPPS) and Co(II)(TPPS), respectively) indicate a mechanism dominated by diffusion processes in these cases. However, reaction of CO with the Fe(II) complexes (k(on) = 3.6 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1) for Fe(II)(TPPS)) displays negative Delta and Delta values, consistent with a mechanism dominated by activation rather than diffusion terms. Measurements of NO dissociation rates from Fe(II)(TPPS)(NO) and Co(II)(TPPS)(NO) by trapping free NO gave k(off) values of 6.3 x 10(-4) s(-1) and 1.5 x 10(-4) s(-1). The respective M(II)(TPPS)(NO) formation constants calculated from k(on)/k(off) ratios were 2.4 x 10(12) and 1.3 x 10(13) M(-1), many orders of magnitude larger than that (1.1 x 10(3) M(-1)) for the reaction of Fe(III)(TPPS) with NO.  相似文献   

13.
In-depth kinetic and mechanistic studies on the reversible binding of NO to water-soluble iron(III) porphyrins as a function of pH revealed unexpected reaction kinetics for monohydroxo-ligated (P)Fe(III)(OH) species formed by deprotonation of coordinated water in diaqua-ligated (P)Fe(III)(H(2)O)(2). The observed significant decrease in the rate of NO binding to (P)Fe(OH) as compared to that of (P)Fe(H(2)O)(2) does not conform with expectations based on previous mechanistic work on NO-heme interactions, which would point to a diffusion-limited reaction for the five-coordinate Fe(III) center in (P)Fe(OH). The decrease in rate and an associatively activated mode of NO binding observed at high pH is ascribed to an increase in the activation barrier related to spin state and structural changes accompanying NO coordination to the high-spin (P)Fe(III)(OH) complex. The existence of such a barrier has previously been observed in the reactions of five-coordinate iron(II) hemes with CO and is evidenced for the first time for the process involving coordination of NO to the iron heme complex. The observed reactivity pattern, relevant in the context of studies on NO interactions with synthetic and biologically important hemes (in particular, hemoproteins), is reported here for an example of a simple water-soluble iron(III) porphyrin [meso-tetrakis(sulfonatomesityl)porphinato]-iron(III), (TMPS)Fe(III).  相似文献   

14.
An Fe(II) carbonyl complex [(PaPy3)Fe(CO)](ClO4) (1) of the pentadentate ligand N,N-bis(2-pyridylmethyl)amine-N-ethyl-2-pyridine-2-carboxamide (PaPy3H, H is the dissociable amide proton) has been synthesized and structurally characterized. This Fe(II) carbonyl exhibits its nu(CO) at 1972 cm(-1), and its 1H NMR spectrum in degassed CD3CN confirms its S = 0 ground state. The bound CO in 1 is not photolabile. Reaction of 1 with an equimolar amount of NO results in the formation of the {Fe-NO}7 nitrosyl [(PaPy3)Fe(NO)](ClO4) (2), while excess NO affords the iron(III) nitro complex [(PaPy3)Fe(NO2)](ClO4) (5). In the presence of [Fe(Cp)2]+ and excess NO, 1 forms the {Fe-NO}6 nitrosyl [(PaPy3)Fe(NO)](ClO4)2 (3). Complex 1 also reacts with dioxygen to afford the iron(III) mu-oxo species [{(PaPy3)Fe}2O](ClO4)2 (4). Comparison of the metric and spectral parameters of 1 with those of the previously reported {Fe-NO}6,7 nitrosyls 3 and 2 provides insight into the electronic distributions in the Fe(II)-CO, Fe(II)-NO, and Fe(II)-NO+ bonds in the isostructural series of complexes 1-3 derived from a non-heme polypyridine ligand with one carboxamide group.  相似文献   

15.
An anodic voltammetric wave of NO catalyzed by meso-tetra(N-methyl-4-pyridyl) iron(III) pentachloride ([FeIII(TMPyP)]5+) was found in a phosphate buffer solution (pH 7.4). The current was 10 times larger than the diffusion-controlled current of NO without the iron porphyrin. The current can be used to detect NO in aerobic physiological environments. Spectroelectrochemical measurements suggested the formation of iron-nitrosyl complex, which is responsible for the catalytic oxidation of NO. The intermediate of the catalytic oxidation was detected by spectroelectrochemistry.  相似文献   

16.
The potentiometric response characteristics with respect to salicylate anion of several membrane electrodes based on iron(III) tetraphenylporphyrin chloride (FeTPPCl) and derivatives with electrophilic and nucleophilic substituents, incorporated into plasticized polyvinylchloride (PVC) membranes were investigated. Complexes tetraphenyl porphyrin iron(III) chloride (FeTPPCl; A), tetrakis (4-methoxyphenyl) porphyrin iron(III) chloride (Fe(TOCH3PP)Cl; B), tetrakis (2,6-dichlorophenyl) porphyrin iron(III) chloride (Fe(TDClPP)Cl; C), tetrakis (4-nitrophenyl) porphyrin iron(III) chloride (Fe(TNO2PP)Cl; D), and tetrakis (pentafluorophenyl) porphyrin iron(III) chloride (Fe(TPFPP)Cl; E) were used as anion carriers in the membrane electrodes. The sensitivity, working range, detection limit, response mechanism, and selectivity of the membrane sensor toward interference shows a considerable dependence on the type of carrier substituent and the pH value of the sample solution. Potentiometric investigations in solutions of various pH show that the carrier complex containing fluoro substituents (E), which have very strong electron-accepting properties and a high ability to form hydrogen bonds, is capable of serving as a positively charged ionophore. Some other ionophores are capable of serving as both charged and neutral carriers under different conditions. The electrodes prepared in this work show super-Nernstian slopes with respect to salicylate concentration, which tend to a Nernstian response (slope near to -59 mV decade-1) upon an increase of the pH of the test solution. The results of UV/Vis absorption spectroscopy are used for interpretation of the formation of an oxene complex between salicylate and iron porphyrins.  相似文献   

17.
Reaction of excess NO with the non-heme Fe(III) complex [(bpb)Fe(py)2]ClO4 in MeCN under strictly anaerobic conditions affords the {Fe-NO}6(nitro)(nitrosyl) complex [(bpb)Fe(NO)(NO2)] (1) via metal-promoted NO disproportionation, while in a MeOH/MeCN mixture, the same reaction leads to reductive nitrosylation and generation of the {Fe-NO}7 species [(bpb)Fe(NO)] (2). Exposure of a solution of 1 in DMF to dioxygen leads to formation of the ring-nitrosylated product [(bpb-NO2)Fe(NO3)(DMF)] (3). The present system therefore exhibits all the NO reactivities reported so far with the iron-porphyrins.  相似文献   

18.
Model ferric heme nitrosyl complexes, [Fe(TPP)(NO)](+) and [Fe(TPFPP)(NO)](+), where TPP is the dianion of 5,10,15,20-tetrakis-phenyl-porphyrin and TPFPP is the dianion of 5,10,15,20-tetrakis-pentafluorophenyl-porphyrin, have been obtained as isolated species by the gas phase reaction of NO with [Fe(III)(TPP)](+) and [Fe(III) (TPFPP)](+) ions delivered in the gas phase by electrospray ionization, respectively. The so-formed nitrosyl complexes have been characterized by vibrational spectroscopy also exploiting (15)N-isotope substitution in the NO ligand. The characteristic NO stretching frequency is observed at 1825 and 1859 cm(-1) for [Fe(III)(TPP)(NO)](+) and [Fe(III)(TPFPP)(NO)](+) ions, respectively, providing reference values for genuine five-coordinate Fe(III)(NO) porphyrin complexes differing only for the presence of either phenyl or pentafluorophenyl substituents on the meso positions of the porphyrin ligand. The vibrational assignment is aided by hybrid density functional theory (DFT) calculations of geometry and electronic structure and frequency analysis which clearly support a singlet spin electronic state for both [Fe(TPP)(NO)](+) and [Fe(TPFPP)(NO)](+) complexes. Both TD-DFT and CASSCF calculations suggest that the singlet ground state is best described as Fe(II)(NO(+)) and that the open-shell AFC bonding scheme contribute for a high-energy excited state. The kinetics of the NO addition reaction in the gas phase are faster for [Fe(III)(TPFPP)](+) ions by a relatively small factor, though highly reliable because of a direct comparative evaluation. The study was aimed at gaining vibrational and reactivity data on five-coordinate Fe(III)(NO) porphyrin complexes, typically transient species in solution, ultimately to provide insights into the nature of the Fe(NO) interaction in heme proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Aqueous solutions of the iron(III) porphyrin complex FeIII(TPPS) (1, TPPS = tetra(4-sulfonatophenyl)-porphyrinato) and nitrite ion react with various substrates S to generate the ferrous nitrosyl complex FeII(TPPS)(NO) (2) plus oxidized substrate. When S is a water-soluble sulfonated phosphine, the product is the resulting monoxide. When air is introduced to the product solutions, 2 is rapidly reoxidized to 1; however, even in the absence of air, there is a slow regeneration of the ferric species with concomitant production of nitrous oxide. Thus, in an anaerobic aqueous environment, FeIII(TPPS) catalyzes oxygen atom transfer from nitrite ion to substrates with the eventual formation of N2O.  相似文献   

20.
Reaction of excess NO with the S = 3/2 Fe(III) complex (Et4N)2[Fe(PhPepS)(Cl)] (1) in protic solvents such as MeOH affords the {Fe-NO}(7) nitrosyl (Et(4)N)(2)[Fe(PhPepS)(NO)] (2). This distorted square-pyramidal S = 1/2 complex, a product of reductive nitrosylation, is the first example of an {Fe-NO}7 nitrosyl with carboxamido-N and thiolato-S coordination. When the same reaction is performed in aprotic solvents such as MeCN and DMF, the product is a dimeric diamagnetic {Fe-NO}6 complex, (Et4N)2-[{Fe(PhPepS)(NO)}2] (3). Both electrochemical and chemical oxidation of 2 leads to the formation of 3 via a transient five-coordinate {Fe-NO}6 intermediate. The oxidation is NO-centered. The ligand frame is not attacked by excess NO in these reactions.  相似文献   

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