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1.
The reaction between hydrogen peroxide and myoglobin (or haemoglobin) ferric haem is a two-electron redox process, yet the stable product is ferryl haem, retaining only one oxidizing equivalent. We have used SVD (singular value decomposition) and global spectroscopic analysis to examine the transient primary spectral intermediates in this reaction, which have been reported as either "compound 0"(ferric peroxide) or "compound I"(ferryl and porphyrin cation radical) types and which may precede the formation of ferrylmyoglobin. To test the hypothesis that the distal histidine facilitates ferryl formation we studied the myoglobin-like haemoglobin from the gastropod mollusc Aplysia fasciata, where this histidine is replaced by valine and its hydrogen bonding role is taken up by a non-homologous arginine. In this protein, consistent with the distal histidine hypothesis, a compound 0 intermediate is formed identified by an EPR spectrum typical of low spin ferric haem complexes. It is significantly more stable than any species seen with mammalian myoglobin. Thirdly, as ferryl haems and associated free radicals may play a role in disease, we have studied the action of myoglobin-peroxide mixtures towards external reductants. Even at a low pH, where ferrylmyoglobin is protonated and in its most reactive state, pre-incubation with reducing donors, including one-electron donors such as ferrocyanide, prior to peroxide addition renders both oxidizing equivalents available. The physiological antioxidant vitamin, ascorbate, is also able to trap both reactive species. Myoglobin can therefore act as a true ascorbate peroxidase. Ascorbate in vivo may be critical in controlling and preventing toxic side reactions of this and related haem proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Activation of O(2) by heme-containing monooxygenases generally commences with the common initial steps of reduction to the ferrous heme and binding of O(2) followed by a one-electron reduction of the O(2)-bound heme. Subsequent steps that generate reactive oxygen intermediates diverge and reflect the effects of protein control on the reaction pathway. In this study, M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopies were used to characterize the electronic states and reaction pathways of reactive oxygen intermediates generated by 77 K radiolytic cryoreduction and subsequent annealing of oxy-heme oxygenase (HO) and oxy-myoglobin (Mb). The results confirm that one-electron reduction of (Fe(II)-O(2))HO is accompanied by protonation of the bound O(2) to generate a low-spin (Fe(III)-O(2)H(-))HO that undergoes self-hydroxylation to form the alpha-meso-hydroxyhemin-HO product. In contrast, one-electron reduction of (Fe(II)-O(2))Mb yields a low-spin (Fe(III)-O(2)(2-))Mb. Protonation of this intermediate generates (Fe(III)-O(2)H(-))Mb, which then decays to a ferryl complex, (Fe(IV)=O(2-))Mb, that exhibits magnetic properties characteristic of the compound II species generated in the reactions of peroxide with heme peroxidases and with Mb. Generation of reactive high-valent states with ferryl species via hydroperoxo intermediates is believed to be the key oxygen-activation steps involved in the catalytic cycles of P450-type monooxygenases. The M?ssbauer data presented here provide direct spectroscopic evidence supporting the idea that ferric-hydroperoxo hemes are indeed the precursors of the reactive ferryl intermediates. The fact that a ferryl intermediate does not accumulate in HO underscores the determining role played by protein structure in controlling the reactivity of reaction intermediates.  相似文献   

3.
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP) from Amphitrite ornata is a heme protein that can function both as a hemoglobin and as a peroxidase. This report describes the use of 77 K cryoreduction EPR/ENDOR techniques to study both functions of DHP. Cryoreduced oxyferrous [Fe(II)-O(2)] DHP exhibits two EPR signals characteristic of a peroxoferric [Fe(III)-O(2)(2-)] heme species, reflecting the presence of conformational substates in the oxyferrous precursor. (1)H ENDOR spectroscopy of the cryogenerated substates shows that H-bonding interactions between His N(ε)H and heme-bound O(2) in these conformers are similar to those in the β-chain of oxyferrous hemoglobin A (HbA) and oxyferrous myoglobin, respectively. Decay of cryogenerated peroxoferric heme DHP intermediates upon annealing at temperatures above 180 K is accompanied by the appearance of a new paramagnetic species with an axial EPR signal with g(⊥) = 3.75 and g(∥) = 1.96, characteristic of an S = 3/2 spin state. This species is assigned to Compound I (Cpd I), in which a porphyrin π-cation radical is ferromagnetically coupled with an S = 1 ferryl [Fe(IV)═O] ion. This species was also trapped by rapid freeze-quench of the ambient-temperature reaction mixture of ferric [Fe(III)] DHP and H(2)O(2). However, in the latter case Cpd I is reduced very rapidly by a nearby tyrosine to form Cpd ES [(Fe(IV)═O)(porphyrin)/Tyr(?)]. Addition of the substrate analogue 2,4,6-trifluorophenol (F(3)PhOH) suppresses formation of the Cpd I intermediate during annealing of cryoreduced oxyferrous DHP at 190 K but has no effect on the spectroscopic properties of the remaining cryoreduced oxyferrous DHP intermediates and kinetics of their decay. These observations indicate that substrate (i) binds to oxyferrous DHP outside of the distal pocket and (ii) can reduce Cpd I to Cpd II [Fe(IV)═O]. These assumptions are also supported by the observation that F(3)PhOH has only a small effect on the EPR properties of radiolytically cryooxidized and cryoreduced ferrous [Fe(II)] DHP. EPR spectra of cryoreduced ferrous DHP disclose the multiconformational nature of the ferrous DHP precursor. The observation and characterization of Cpds I, II, and ES in the absence and in the presence of F(3)PhOH provides definitive evidence of a mechanism involving consecutive one-electron steps and clarifies the role of all intermediates formed during turnover.  相似文献   

4.
5.
甲醛光催化氧化的反应机理   总被引:49,自引:0,他引:49  
采用程序升温脱附(TPD), 电子自旋共振(ESR)及自旋捕获 电子自旋共振(ST ESR)等物理方法对甲醛光催化氧化过程中,反应物的吸附状态、自由基中间物种及反应机理 进行了研究.结果表明,在光催化氧化空气中微量甲醛的反应条件下,吸附在催化剂表面的空 气中的氧气被光生电子还原为•O-2,微量水被空穴氧化为•OH.二者为甲醛的深度氧化提供了高活性的氧化剂.甲醛是通过中间产物甲酸而氧化为终点 产物二氧化碳的.  相似文献   

6.
A specific DNA oligonucleotide--hemin complex (PS2.M--hemin complex) that exhibits DNA-enhanced peroxidative activity was studied by EPR and UV--visible spectroscopy and by chemical probing analysis. EPR data obtained from low-temperature experiments on the PS2.M--hemin complex showed both a low-field g approximately 6 and a high-field g approximately 2 signal. These EPR signals are typical of high-spin ferric heme with axial symmetry as judged by the EPR spectrum of six-coordinate heme iron in acidic Fe(III)-myoglobin. This similarity is consistent with the presence of two axial ligands to the heme iron within the PS2.M--hemin complex, one of which is a water molecule. Optical analyses of the acid-base transition for the hemin complex yielded a pK(a) value for the water ligand of 8.70 +/- 0.03 (mean +/- SD). Low-temperature EPR analysis coupled with parallel spin-trapping investigations following the reaction of the PS2.M--hemin complex and hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) indicated the formation of a carbon-centered radical, most likely on the PS2.M oligonucleotide. Chemical probing analysis identified specific guanine bases within the PS2.M sequence that underwent oxidative damage upon reaction with H(2)O(2). These and other experimental findings support the hypothesis that the interaction of specific guanines of PS2.M with the bound hemin cofactor might contribute to the superior peroxidative activity of the PS2.M--hemin complex.  相似文献   

7.
One of the difficulties in preparing accurate ambient-temperature model complexes for heme proteins, particularly in the ferric state, has been the generation of mixed-ligand adducts: complexes with different ligands on either side of the heme. The difference in the accessibility of the two sides of the heme in the H93G cavity mutant of myoglobin (Mb) provides a potential general solution to this problem. To demonstrate the versatility of H93G Mb for the preparation of heme protein models, numerous mixed-ligand adducts of ferrous, ferric, and ferryl imidazole-ligated H93G (H93G(Im) Mb) have been prepared. The complexes have been characterized by electronic absorption and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy in comparison to analogous derivatives of wild type Mb. The starting ferric H93G(Im) Mb state spectroscopically resembles wild-type ferric Mb as expected for a complex containing a single imidazole in the proximal cavity and water bound on the distal side. Addition of a sixth ligand to ferric H93G(Im) Mb, whether charge neutral (imidazole) or anionic (cyanide and azide), results in formation of six-coordinate low-spin complexes with MCD characteristics similar to those of parallel derivatives of wild-type ferric Mb. Reduction of ferric H93G(Im) Mb and subsequent exposure to either CO, NO, or O2 produces ferrous complexes (deoxy, CO, NO, and O2) that consistently exhibit MCD spectra similar to the analogous ferrous species of wild-type ferrous Mb. Most interestingly, reaction of ferric H93G(Im) Mb with H2O2 results in the formation of a stable high-valent oxoferryl complex with MCD characteristics that are essentially identical to those of oxoferryl wild-type Mb. The generation of such a wide array of mixed-ligand heme complexes demonstrates the efficacy of the H93G Mb cavity mutant as a template for the preparation of heme protein model complexes.  相似文献   

8.
Density functional calculations were performed in response to the controversies regarding the identity of the oxidant species in cytochrome P450. The calculations were used to gauge the relative C-H hydroxylation reactivity of three potential oxidant species of the enzyme, the high-valent oxo-iron species Compound I (Cpd I), the ferric hydroperoxide Compound 0 (Cpd 0), and the ferric-hydrogen peroxide complex Fe(H(2)O(2)). The results for the hydroxylation of a radical probe substrate, 1, show the following trends: (a) Cpd I is the most reactive species; in its presence the other two reagents will be silent. (b) In the absence of Cpd I, substrate oxidation by Cpd 0 and Fe(H(2)O(2)) will take place via a stepwise mechanism that involves initial O-O homolysis followed by H-abstraction from 1. (c) Cpd 0 will undergo mostly porphyrin hydroxylation and only approximately 15% of substrate oxidation producing mostly the rearranged alcohol, 3 (Scheme 2). (d) Fe(H(2)O(2)) will generate mostly free hydrogen peroxide (uncoupling). A small fraction will perform substrate oxidation and lead mostly to 3. Reactivity probes for these reagents are kinetic isotope effect (KIE) and the product ratio of unrearranged to rearranged alcohols, [2/3]. Thus, for substrate oxidation by Cpd 0 or Fe(H(2)O(2)) KIE will be small, approximately 2, while Cpd I will have large KIE values. Typically both Cpd 0 and Fe(H(2)O(2)) will lead to a [2/3] ratio < 1, while Cpd I will lead to ratios > 1. In addition, the product isotope effect (KIE(2)/KIE(3) not equal 1) is expected from the reactivity of Cpd I.  相似文献   

9.
We have characterized the intermediates formed in the peroxidase cycle of the multifunctional heme-containing enzyme KatG of M. tuberculosis. Selected Trp variants from the heme proximal (W321F) and distal (W107F and W91F) sides were analyzed together with the wild-type enzyme with regard to the reaction with peroxyacetic acid and hydrogen peroxide (in the catalase-inactive W107F). The 9 GHz EPR spectrum of the enzyme upon reaction with peroxyacetic acid showed the contribution of three protein-based radical species, two Trp* and a Tyr*, which could be discerned using a combined approach of multifrequency Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy with selective deuterium labeling of tryptophan and tyrosine residues and site-directed mutagenesis. Trp321, a residue in H-bonding interactions with the iron through Asp381 and the heme axial ligand His270, was identified as one of the radical sites. The 9 GHz EPR signal of the Trp321 radical species was consistent with an exchange-coupled species similar to the oxoferryl-Trp radical intermediate in cytochrome c peroxidase. On the basis of the possibility of distinguishing among the different radical intermediates of the peroxidase cycle in M. tuberculosis KatG (MtKatG), we used EPR spectroscopy to monitor the reactivity of the enzyme and its W321F variant with isoniazid, the front-line drug used in the treatment of tuberculosis. The EPR experiments on the W321F variant preincubated with isoniazid allowed us to detect the short-lived [Fe(IV)=O Por*+] intermediate. Our results showed that neither the [Fe(IV)=O Por*+] nor the [Fe(IV)=O Trp321*+] intermediates were the reactive species with isoniazid. Accordingly, the subsequent intermediate (most probably the other Trp*) is proposed to be the oxidizing species. Our findings demonstrate that the protein-based radicals formed as alternative intermediates to the [Fe(IV)=O Por*+] can play the role of cofactors for substrate oxidation in the peroxidase cyle of KatGs.  相似文献   

10.
Superoxide reductase is a nonheme iron metalloenzyme that detoxifies superoxide anion radicals O(2)(?-) in some microorganisms. Its catalytic mechanism was previously proposed to involve a single ferric iron (hydro)peroxo intermediate, which is protonated to form the reaction product H(2)O(2). Here, we show by pulse radiolysis that the mutation of the well-conserved lysine 48 into isoleucine in the SOR from Desulfoarculus baarsii dramatically affects its reaction with O(2)(?-). Although the first reaction intermediate and its decay are not affected by the mutation, H(2)O(2) is no longer the reaction product. In addition, in contrast to the wild-type SOR, the lysine mutant catalyzes a two-electron oxidation of an olefin into epoxide in the presence of H(2)O(2), suggesting the formation of iron-oxo intermediate species in this mutant. In agreement with the recent X-ray structures of the peroxide intermediates trapped in a SOR crystal, these data support the involvement of lysine 48 in the specific protonation of the proximal oxygen of the peroxide intermediate to generate H(2)O(2), thus avoiding formation of iron-oxo species, as is observed in cytochrome P450. In addition, we proposed that the first reaction intermediate observed by pulse radiolysis is a ferrous-iron superoxo species, in agreement with TD-DFT calculations of the absorption spectrum of this intermediate. A new reaction scheme for the catalytical mechanism of SOR with O(2)(?-) is presented in which ferrous iron-superoxo and ferric hydroperoxide species are reaction intermediates, and the lysine 48 plays a key role in the control of the evolution of iron peroxide intermediate to form H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

11.
The reaction of [Fe(II)(BF(4))(2)]·6H(2)O with the nitroxide radical, 4,4-dimethyl-2,2-di(2-pyridyl) oxazolidine-N-oxide (L(?)), produces the mononuclear transition metal complex [Fe(II)(L(?))(2)](BF(4))(2) (1) which has been investigated using temperature dependent susceptibility, Mo?ssbauer spectroscopy, electrochemistry, density functional theory (DFT) calculations, and X-ray structure analysis. Single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis and Mo?ssbauer measurements reveal an octahedral low spin Fe(2+) environment where the pyridyl donors from L(?) coordinate equatorially while the oxygen containing the radical from L(?) coordinates axially forming a linear O(?)··Fe(II)··O(?) arrangement. Magnetic susceptibility measurements show a strong radical-radical intramolecular antiferromagnetic interaction mediated by the diamagnetic Fe(2+) center. This is supported by DFT calculations which show a mutual spatial overlap of 0.24 and a spin density population analysis which highlights the antiparallel spin alignment between the two ligands. Similarly the monocationic complex [Fe(III)(L(-))(2)](BPh(4))·0.5H(2)O (2) has been fully characterized with Fe-ligand and N-O bond length changes in the X-ray structure analysis, magnetic measurements revealing a Curie-like S = 1/2 ground state, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra, DFT calculations, and electrochemistry measurements all consistent with assignment of Fe in the (III) state and both ligands in the L(-) form. 2 is formed by a rare, reductively induced oxidation of the Fe center, and all physical data are self-consistent. The electrochemical studies were undertaken for both 1 and 2, thus allowing common Fe-ligand redox intermediates to be identified and the results interpreted in terms of square reaction schemes.  相似文献   

12.
QM/MM calculations are used to elucidate the Poulos-Kraut (Poulos, T. L.; Kraut, J. J. Biol. Chem. 1980, 255, 8199-8205) mechanism of O-O bond activation and Compound I (Cpd I) formation in HRP, in conditions corresponding to neutral to basic pH. Attempts to generate Compound I directly from the Fe(H2O2) complex by migrating the proton from the proximal oxygen to the distal one (1,2- proton shift) result in high barriers. The lowest energy mechanism was found to involve initial deprotonation of ferric hydrogen peroxide complex (involving spin crossover from the quartet to the doublet state) by His42 to form ferric-hydroperoxide (Cpd 0). Subsequently, the distal OH group of Cpd 0 is pulled by Arg38 and reprotonated by His42(H+) to form Cpd I and a water molecule that bridges the two residues. The structures of the intermediate and the transition state reveal the manner by which the Arg-His residues promote cooperatively the electronic reorganization that is required to attend the heterolytic O-O cleavage.  相似文献   

13.
We have employed rapid scan stopped-flow spectroscopy to examine whether the mechanism of oxidative dehalogenation catalyzed by C. fumago chloroperoxidase (CCPO) involves two consecutive one-electron steps or a single two-electron oxidation. First, we optimized the formation of CCPO compound I (CCPO-I) [Fe(IV)=O/porphyrin radical] and CCPO compound II (CCPO-II) [Fe(IV)=O] for use in double mixing rapid scan stopped-flow experiments. Reaction of CCPO-I with 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (TCP) quickly yielded CCPO-II. Reaction of CCPO-II, a one-electron oxidant, with TCP rapidly regenerated the ferric resting state of the enzyme. The rates of the reaction of both CCPO-I and -II with TCP are first-order with respect to [TCP]. In the absence of organic substrate, CCPO-I is slowly reduced to CCPO-II and then the ferric state. The ability of both CCPO-I and -II to carry out the oxidative dehalogenation reaction is consistent with a mechanism involving two consecutive one-electron oxidations. In contrast, reaction of CCPO-I with thioanisole generated the ferric enzyme with no evidence of CCPO-II, consistent with a single two-electron oxidation by insertion of an oxygen atom. The relative stability of CCPO-I and -II has allowed us to differentiate between one- and two-electron substrate oxidations using rapid scan stopped-flow techniques.  相似文献   

14.
The epoxidation of ethene by a model for Compound I of cytochrome P450, studied by the use of density functional B3LYP calculations, involves two-state reactivity (TSR) with multiple electromer species, hence "multi-state epoxidation". The reaction is found to proceed in stepwise and effectively concerted manners. Several reactive states are involved; the reactant is an (oxo)iron(IV) porphyrin cation radical complex with two closely lying spin states (quartet and doublet), both of which react with ethene to form intermediate complexes with a covalent C-O bond and a carbon-centered radical (radical intermediates). The radical intermediates exist in two electromers that differ in the oxidation state of iron; Por(+)(*)Fe(III)OCH(2)CH(2)(*) and PorFe(IV)OCH(2)CH(2)(*) (Por = porphyrin). These radical intermediates exist in both the doublet- and quartet spin states. The quartet spin intermediates have substantial barriers for transformation to the quartet spin PorFe(III)-epoxide complex (2.3 kcal mol(-)(1) for PorFe(IV)OCH(2)CH(2)(*) and 7.2 kcal mol(-)(1) for Por(+)(*)Fe(III)OCH(2)CH(2)(*)). In contrast, the doublet spin radicals collapse to the corresponding PorFe(III)-epoxide complex with virtually no barriers. Consequently, the lifetimes of the radical intermediates are much longer on the quartet- than on the doublet spin surface. The loss of isomeric identity in the epoxide and rearrangements to other products arise therefore mostly, if not only, from the quartet process, while the doublet state epoxidation is effectively concerted (Scheme 7). Experimental trends are discussed in the light of the computed mechanistic scheme, and a comparison is made with closely related mechanistic schemes deduced from experiment.  相似文献   

15.
The enzymatic oxidation of silk with H(2)O(2) in the presence of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) has been investigated. Two intermediate complexes have been observed during this reaction. Both can be attributed to Fe(4+) ions axially bonded to an oxygen atom and to a porphyrin radical (P). In the most unstable of them, indicated as compound II, the chemical bond between [Fe(IV)=O](2+) and P was weaker than in the other, indicated as compound I. The former compound disappeared within 1 h of the reaction, at difference with the latter, traces of which were observed even after 3 weeks with dried samples. However, the chemical bond between [Fe(IV)=O](2+) and P in compound I weakened during the sample ageing. All these phenomena have been enlightened by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and spectrophotometric ultraviolet/visible (UV/Vis) measurements.  相似文献   

16.
Kinetic studies were performed with microperoxidase-8 (Fe(III)MP-8), the proteolytic breakdown product of horse heart cytochrome c containing an octapeptide linked to an iron protoporphyrin IX. Mn(III) was substituted for Fe(III) in Mn(III)MP-8.The mechanism of formation of the reactive metal-oxo and metal-hydroperoxo intermediates of M(III)MP-8 upon reaction of H(2)O(2) with Fe(III)MP-8 and Mn(III)MP-8 was investigated by rapid-scan stopped-flow spectroscopy and transient EPR. Two steps (k(obs1) and k(obs2)) were observed and analyzed for the reaction of hydrogen peroxide with both catalysts. The plots of k(obs1) as function of [H(2)O(2)] at pH 8.0 and pH 9.1 for Fe(III)MP-8, and at pH 10.2 and pH 10.9 for Mn(III)MP-8, exhibit saturation kinetics, which reveal the accumulation of an intermediate. Double reciprocal plots of 1/k(obs1) as function of 1/[H(2)O(2)] at different pH values reveal a competitive effect of protons in the oxidation of M(III)MP-8. This effect of protons is confirmed by the linear dependence of 1/k(obs1) on [H(+)] showing that k(obs1) increases with the pH. The UV-visible spectra of the intermediates formed at the end of the first step (k(obs1)) exhibit a spectrum characteristic of a high-valent metal-oxo intermediate for both catalysts. Transient EPR of Mn(III)MP-8 incubated with an excess of H(2)O(2), at pH 11.5, shows the detection of a free radical signal at g approximately equal to 2 and of a resonance at g approximately equal to 4 characteristic of a Mn(IV) (S = 3/2) species. On the basis of these results, the following mechanism is proposed: (i) M(III)MP-8-OH(2) is deprotonated to M(III)MP-8-OH in a rapid preequilibrium step, with a pK(a) = 9.2 +/- 0.9 for Fe(III)MP-8 and a pK(a) = 11.2 +/- 0.3 for Mn(III)MP-8; (ii) M(III)MP-8-OH reacts with H(2)O(2) to form Compound 0, M(III)MP8-OOH, with a second-order rate constant k(1) = (1.3 +/- 0.6) x 10(6) M(-1) x s(-1) for Fe(III)MP-8 and k(1) = (1.6 +/- 0.9) x 10(5) M(-1) x s(-1) for Mn(III)MP-8; (iii) this metal-hydroperoxo intermediate is subsequently converted to a high-valent metal-oxo species, M(IV)MP-8=O, with a free radical on the peptide (R(*+)). The first-order rate constants for the cleavage of the hydroperoxo group are k(2) = 165 +/- 8 s(-1) for Fe(III)MP-8 and k(2) = 145 +/- 7 s(-1) for Mn(III)MP-8; and (iv) the proposed M(IV)MP-8=O(R(*+)) intermediate slowly decays (k(obs2)) with a rate constant of k(obs2) = 13.1 +/- 1.1 s(-)(1) for Fe(III)MP-8 and k(obs2) = 5.2 +/- 1.2 s(-1) for Mn(III)MP-8. The results show that Compound 0 is formed prior to what is analyzed as a high-valent metal-oxo peptide radical intermediate.  相似文献   

17.
Non-heme iron(III) complexes of 14-membered tetraaza macrocycles have previously been found to catalytically decompose hydrogen peroxide to water and molecular oxygen, like the native enzyme catalase. Here the mechanism of this reaction is theoretically investigated by DFT calculations at the (U)B3LYP/6-31G* level, with focus on the reactivity of the possible spin states of the FeIII complexes. The computations suggest that H2O2 decomposition follows a homolytic route with intermediate formation of an iron(IV) oxo radical cation species (L.+FeIV==O) that resembles Compound I of natural iron porphyrin systems. Along the whole catalytic cycle, no significant energetic differences were found for the reaction proceeding on the doublet (S=1/2) or on the quartet (S=3/2) hypersurface, with the single exception of the rate-determining O--O bond cleavage of the first associated hydrogen peroxide molecule, for which reaction via the doublet state is preferred. The sextet (S=5/2) state of the FeIII complexes appears to be unreactive in catalase-like reactions.  相似文献   

18.
The tetranuclear manganese complex [Mn(IV)(4)O(5)(terpy)(4)(H(2)O)(2)](ClO(4))(6) (1; terpy = 2,2':6',2″-terpyridine) gives catalytic water oxidation in aqueous solution, as determined by electrochemistry and GC-MS. Complex 1 also exhibits catalytic water oxidation when adsorbed on kaolin clay, with Ce(IV) as the primary oxidant. The redox intermediates of complex 1 adsorbed on kaolin clay upon addition of Ce(IV) have been characterized by using diffuse reflectance UV/visible and EPR spectroscopy. One of the products in the reaction on kaolin clay is Mn(III), as determined by parallel-mode EPR spectroscopic studies. When 1 is oxidized in aqueous solution with Ce(IV), the reaction intermediates are unstable and decompose to form Mn(II), detected by EPR spectroscopy, and MnO(2). DFT calculations show that the oxygen in the mono-μ-oxo bridge, rather than Mn(IV), is oxidized after an electron is removed from the Mn(IV,IV,IV,IV) tetramer. On the basis of the calculations, the formation of O(2) is proposed to occur by reaction of water with an electrophilic manganese-bound oxyl radical species, (?)O-Mn(2)(IV/IV), produced during the oxidation of the tetramer. This study demonstrates that [Mn(IV)(4)O(5)(terpy)(4)(H(2)O)(2)](ClO(4))(6) may be relevant for understanding the role of the Mn tetramer in photosystem II.  相似文献   

19.
Unlike direct ESR, spin trap methodology depends on the absolute fidelity of the spin trap reaction. Two alternative reactions of 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) leading to radical adduct artifacts have been discovered and investigated: inverted spin trapping and the Forrester-Hepburn nucleophilic mechanism. These two alternate pathways to radical adducts are a combination of one-electron oxidation and nucleophilic addition, in either order. In biological systems, serious artifacts have been reported due to the Forrester-Hepburn mechanism, which is initiated by the addition of a nucleophile to DMPO. It has recently been demonstrated that (bi)sulfite (hydrated sulfur dioxide) can react with DMPO via a nonradical, nucleophilic reaction, and it has been further proposed that DMPO/(?)SO(3)(-) formation in biological systems is an artifact and not the result of spin trapping of sulfur trioxide anion radical ((?)SO(3)(-)). The one-electron oxidation of (bi)sulfite catalyzed by horseradish peroxidase (HRP)/hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) has been reinvestigated by ESR spin trapping with DMPO and oxygen uptake studies to obtain further evidence for the radical reaction mechanism. In the absence of DMPO, the initial rate of (bi)sulfite-dependent oxygen and H(2)O(2) consumption was determined to be half of the initial rate of DMPO/(?)SO(3)(-) radical adduct formation as determined by ESR, demonstrating that, under our experimental conditions, DMPO exclusively forms the radical adduct by trapping the (?)SO(3)(-).  相似文献   

20.
Alkyl substituted aromatics are present in fuels and in the environment because they are major intermediates in the oxidation or combustion of gasoline, jet, and other engine fuels. The major reaction pathways for oxidation of this class of molecules is through loss of a benzyl hydrogen atom on the alkyl group via abstraction reactions. One of the major intermediates in the combustion and atmospheric oxidation of the benzyl radicals is benzaldehyde, which rapidly loses the weakly bound aldehydic hydrogen to form a resonance stabilized benzoyl radical (C6H5C(?)═O). A detailed study of the thermochemistry of intermediates and the oxidation reaction paths of the benzoyl radical with dioxygen is presented in this study. Structures and enthalpies of formation for important stable species, intermediate radicals, and transition state structures resulting from the benzoyl radical +O2 association reaction are reported along with reaction paths and barriers. Enthalpies, ΔfH298(0), are calculated using ab initio (G3MP2B3) and density functional (DFT at B3LYP/6-311G(d,p)) calculations, group additivity (GA), and literature data. Bond energies on the benzoyl and benzoyl-peroxy systems are also reported and compared to hydrocarbon systems. The reaction of benzoyl with O2 has a number of low energy reaction channels that are not currently considered in either atmospheric chemistry or combustion models. The reaction paths include exothermic, chain branching reactions to a number of unsaturated oxygenated hydrocarbon intermediates along with formation of CO2. The initial reaction of the C6H5C(?)═O radical with O2 forms a chemically activated benzoyl peroxy radical with 37 kcal mol(-1) internal energy; this is significantly more energy than the 21 kcal mol(-1) involved in the benzyl or allyl + O2 systems. This deeper well results in a number of chemical activation reaction paths, leading to highly exothermic reactions to phenoxy radical + CO2 products.  相似文献   

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