首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Density functional calculations using the B3LYP functional have been used to study the reaction mechanism of [Fe(Tp(Ph2))BF] (Tp(Ph2) = hydrotris(3,5-diphenylpyrazol-1-yl)borate; BF = benzoylformate) with dioxygen. This mononuclear non-heme iron(II) complex was recently synthesized, and it proved to be the first biomimetic complex reproducing the dioxygenase activity of alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent enzymes. Moreover, the enthalpy and entropy of activation for this biologically interesting process were derived from kinetic experiments offering a unique possibility for direct comparison of theoretical and experimental data. The results reported here support a mechanism in which oxidative decarboxylation of the keto acid is the rate-limiting step. This oxygen activation process proceeds on the septet potential energy surface through a transition state for a concerted O-O and C-C bond cleavage. In the next step, a high-valent iron-oxo species performs electrophilic attack on the phenyl ring of the Tp(Ph2) ligand leading to an iron(III)-radical sigma-complex. Subsequent proton-coupled electron-transfer yields an iron(II)-phenol intermediate, which can bind dioxygen and reduce it to a superoxide radical. Finally, the protonated superoxide radical leaves the first coordination sphere of the iron(III)-phenolate complex and dismutates to dioxygen and hydrogen peroxide. The calculated activation barrier (enthalpy and entropy) and the overall reaction energy profile agree well with experimental data. A comparison to the enzymatic process, which is suggested to occur on the quintet surface, has been made.  相似文献   

2.
The reaction mechanism for the formation of the hydroxylating intermediate in aromatic amino acid hydroxylases (i.e., phenylalanine hydroxylase, tyrosine hydroxylase, tryptophan hydroxylase) was investigated by means of hybrid density functional theory. These enzymes use molecular oxygen to hydroxylate both the tetrahydrobiopterin cofactor and the aromatic amino acid. A mechanism is proposed in which dioxygen forms a bridging bond between the cofactor and iron. The product is an iron(II)-peroxy-pterin intermediate, and iron was found to be essential for the catalysis of this step. No stable intermediates involving a pterin radical cation and a superoxide ion O(2)(-) were found on the reaction pathway. Heterolysis of the O-O bond in the iron(II)-peroxy-pterin intermediate is promoted by one of the water molecules coordinated to iron and releases hydroxypterin and the high-valent iron oxo species Fe(IV)=O, which can carry out subsequent hydroxylation of aromatic rings. In the proposed mechanism, the formation of the bridging C-O bond is rate-limiting in the formation of Fe(IV)=O.  相似文献   

3.
The first part of the catalytic cycle of the pterin‐dependent, dioxygen‐using nonheme‐iron aromatic amino acid hydroxylases, leading to the FeIV?O hydroxylating intermediate, has been investigated by means of density functional theory. The starting structure in the present investigation is the water‐free Fe? O2 complex cluster model that represents the catalytically competent form of the enzymes. A model for this structure was obtained in a previous study of water‐ligand dissociation from the hexacoordinate model complex of the X‐ray crystal structure of the catalytic domain of phenylalanine hydroxylase in complex with the cofactor (6R)‐L ‐erythro‐5,6,7,8‐tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) (PAH‐FeII‐BH4). The O? O bond rupture and two‐electron oxidation of the cofactor are found to take place via a Fe‐O‐O‐BH4 bridge structure that is formed in consecutive radical reactions involving a superoxide ion, O2?. The overall effective free‐energy barrier to formation of the FeIV?O species is calculated to be 13.9 kcal mol?1, less than 2 kcal mol?1 lower than that derived from experiment. The rate‐limiting step is associated with a one‐electron transfer from the cofactor to dioxygen, whereas the spin inversion needed to arrive at the quintet state in which the O? O bond cleavage is finalized, essentially proceeds without activation.  相似文献   

4.
NOV1, a stilbene cleavage oxygenase, catalyzes the cleavage of the central double bond of stilbenes to two phenolic aldehydes, using a 4-His Fe(II) center and dioxygen. Herein, we use in-protein quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations to elucidate the reaction mechanism of the central double bond cleavage of phytoalexin resveratrol by NOV1. Our results showed that the oxygen molecule prefers to bind to the iron center in a side-on fashion, as suggested from the experiment. The quintet Fe−O2 complex with the side-on superoxo antiferromagnetic coupled to the resveratrol radical is identified as the reactive oxygen species. The QM/MM results support the dioxygenase mechanism involving a dioxetane intermediate with a rate-limiting barrier of 10.0 kcal mol−1. The alternative pathway through an epoxide intermediate is ruled out due to a larger rate-limiting barrier (26.8 kcal mol−1). These findings provide important insight into the catalytic mechanism of carotenoid cleavage oxygenases and also the dioxygen activation of non-heme enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
High-valent iron-oxo species have frequently been invoked in the oxidation of hydrocarbons by both heme and non-heme enzymes. Although a formally Fe(V)=O species, that is, [(Por(*))Fe(IV)=O](+), has been widely accepted as the key oxidant in stereospecific alkane hydroxylation by heme systems, it is not established that such a high-valent state can be accessed by a non-heme ligand environment. Herein we report a systematic study on alkane oxidations with H(2)O(2) catalyzed by a group of non-heme iron complexes, that is, [Fe(II)(TPA)(CH(3)CN)(2)](2+) (1, TPA = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine) and its alpha- and beta-substituted analogues. The reactivity patterns of this family of Fe(II)(TPA) catalysts can be modulated by the electronic and steric properties of the ligand environment, which affects the spin states of a common Fe(III)-OOH intermediate. Such an Fe(III)-peroxo species is high-spin when the TPA ligand has two or three alpha-substituents and is proposed to be directly responsible for the selective C-H bond cleavage of the alkane substrate. The thus-generated alkyl radicals, however, have relatively long lifetimes and are susceptible to radical epimerization and trapping by O(2). On the other hand, 1 and the beta-substituted Fe(II)(TPA) complexes catalyze stereospecific alkane hydroxylation by a mechanism involving both a low-spin Fe(III)-OOH intermediate and an Fe(V)=O species derived from O-O bond heterolysis. We propose that the heterolysis pathway is promoted by two factors: (a) the low-spin iron(III) center which weakens the O-O bond and (b) the binding of an adjacent water ligand that can hydrogen bond to the terminal oxygen of the hydroperoxo group and facilitate the departure of the hydroxide. Evidence for the Fe(V)=O species comes from isotope-labeling studies showing incorporation of (18)O from H(2)(18)O into the alcohol products. (18)O-incorporation occurs by H(2)(18)O binding to the low-spin Fe(III)-OOH intermediate, its conversion to a cis-H(18)O-Fe(V)=O species, and then oxo-hydroxo tautomerization. The relative contributions of the two pathways of this dual-oxidant mechanism are affected by both the electron donating ability of the TPA ligand and the strength of the C-H bond to be broken. These studies thus serve as a synthetic precedent for an Fe(V)=O species in the oxygen activation mechanisms postulated for non-heme iron enzymes such as methane monooxygenase and Rieske dioxygenases.  相似文献   

6.
Density functional theory with the B3LYP hybrid functional has been used to study the mechanisms for dioxygen activation by four families of mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes: alpha-ketoacid-dependent dioxygenases, tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent hydroxylases, extradiol dioxygenases, and Rieske dioxygenases. These enzymes have a common active site with a ferrous ion coordinated to two histidines and one carboxylate group (aspartate or glutamate). In contrast to the heme case, this type of weak field environment always leads to a high-spin ground state. With the exception of the Rieske dioxygenases, which have an electron source outside the active site, the dioxygen activation process passes through the formation of a bridging-peroxide species, which then undergoes O-O bond cleavage finally leading to the four electron reduction of O(2). In the case of tetrahydrobiopterin- and alpha-ketoacid-dependent enzymes, the O-O heterolysis yields a high-valent iron-oxo species, which is capable of performing a two-electron oxidation chemistry on various organic substrates. For the other two families of enzymes (extradiol dioxygenases and Rieske dioxygenases) the substrate oxidation and the O-O bond cleavage are found to be coupled. In the extradiol dioxygenases the product of the O-O bond cleavage is a ferric iron with an oxy-substrate with a mixture of radical and anionic character, which is essential for the selectivity of the catechol cleavage.  相似文献   

7.
The chemical pathways leading to the hydroxylated aromatic amino acids in phenylalanine and tryptophan hydroxylases have been investigated by means of hybrid density functional theory. In the catalytic core of these non-heme iron enzymes, dioxygen reacts with the pterin cofactor and is likely to be activated by forming an iron(IV)=O complex. The capability of this species to act as a hydroxylating intermediate has been explored. Depending on the protonation state of the ligands of the metal, two different mechanisms are found to be energetically possible for the hydroxylation of phenylalanine and tryptophan by the high-valent iron-oxo species. With a hydroxo ligand the two-electron oxidation of the aromatic ring passes through a radical, while an arenium cation is involved when a water replaces the hydroxide. After the attack of the activated oxygen on the substrate, it is also found that a 1,2-hydride shift (known as an NIH shift) generates a keto intermediate, which can decay to the true product through an intermolecular keto-enol tautomerization. The benzylic hydroxylation of 4-methylphenylalanine by the Fe(IV)=O species has also been investigated according to the rebound mechanism. The computed energetics lead to the conclusion that Fe(IV)=O is capable not only of aromatic hydroxylation, but also of benzylic hydroxylation.  相似文献   

8.
In this work, we present the first computational study on a biomimetic cysteine dioxygenase model complex, [Fe(II)(LN(3)S)](+), in which LN(3)S is a tetradentate ligand with a bis(imino)pyridyl scaffold and a pendant arylthiolate group. The reaction mechanism of sulfur dioxygenation with O(2) was examined by density functional theory (DFT) methods and compared with results obtained for cysteine dioxygenase. The reaction proceeds via multistate reactivity patterns on competing singlet, triplet, and quintet spin state surfaces. The reaction mechanism is analogous to that found for cysteine dioxygenase enzymes (Kumar, D.; Thiel, W.; de Visser, S. P. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 3869-3882); hence, the computations indicate that this complex can closely mimic the enzymatic process. The catalytic mechanism starts from an iron(III)-superoxo complex and the attack of the terminal oxygen atom of the superoxo group on the sulfur atom of the ligand. Subsequently, the dioxygen bond breaks to form an iron(IV)-oxo complex with a bound sulfenato group. After reorganization, the second oxygen atom is transferred to the substrate to give a sulfinic acid product. An alternative mechanism involving the direct attack of dioxygen on the sulfur, without involving any iron-oxygen intermediates, was also examined. Importantly, a significant energetic preference for dioxygen coordinating to the iron center prior to attack at sulfur was discovered and serves to elucidate the function of the metal ion in the reaction process. The computational results are in good agreement with experimental observations, and the differences and similarities of the biomimetic complex and the enzymatic cysteine dioxygenase center are highlighted.  相似文献   

9.
Spin-inversion mechanisms in O2 binding to a model heme complex, consisting of Fe(II)-porphyrin and imidazole, were investigated using density-functional theory calculations. First, we applied the recently proposed mixed-spin Hamiltonian method to locate spin-inversion structures between different total spin multiplicities. Nine spin-inversion structures were successfully optimized for the singlet–triplet, singlet–quintet, triplet–quintet, and quintet–septet spin-inversion processes. We found that the singlet–triplet spin-inversion points are located around the potential energy surface region at short Fe–O distances, whereas the singlet–quintet and quintet–septet spin-inversion points are located at longer Fe–O distances. This suggests that both narrow and broad crossing models play roles in O2 binding to the Fe-porphyrin complex. To further understand spin-inversion mechanisms, we performed on-the-fly Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics calculations. The reaction coordinates, which are correlated to the spin-inversion dynamics between different spin multiplicities, are also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Density functional calculations on a nonheme biomimetic (Fe=O(TMCS+) have been performed and its catalytic properties versus propene investigated. Our studies show that this catalyst is able to chemoselectively hydroxylate C=H bonds even in the presence of C=C double bonds. This phenomenon has been analyzed and found to occur due to Pauli repusions between protons on the TMCS ligand with protons attached to the approaching substrate. The geometries of the rate determining transition states indicate that the steric hindrance is larger in the epoxidation transition states than in the hydroxylation ones with much shorter distances; hence the hydroxylation pathway is favored over the epoxidation. Although, the reactant experiences close lying triplet and quintet spin states, the dominant reaction mechanism takes place on the quintet spin state surface; i.e., Fe=O(TMCS)+ reacts via single-state reactivity. Our calculations show that this spin state selectivity is the result of geometric orientation of the transition state structures, whereby the triplet ones are destabilized by electrostatic repulsions between the substrate and the ligand while the quintet spin transition states are aligned along the ideal axis. The reactivity patterns and geometries are compared with oxoiron species of dioxygenase and monoxygenase enzymes. Thus, Fe=O(TMCS)+ shows some similarities with P450 enzyme reactivity: it chemoselectively hydroxylates C=H bonds even in the presence of a C=C double bond and therefore is an acceptable P450 biomimetic. However, the absolute barriers of substrate oxidation by Fe=O(TMCS)+ are higher than the ones obtained with heme enzymes, but the chemoselectivity is lesser affected by external perturbations such as hydrogen bonding of a methanol molecule toward the thiolate sulfur or a dielectric constant. This is the first oxoiron complex whereby we calculated a chemoselective hydroxylation over epoxidation in the gas phase.  相似文献   

11.
We have used dioxygen, not artificial oxidants such as peracids, iodosylarenes, and hydroperoxides, in the generation of a mononuclear nonheme oxoiron(IV) complex, [Fe(IV)(TMC)(O)]2+ (TMC = 1,4,8,11-tetramethyl-1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane), from its corresponding Fe(II) complex, [Fe(TMC)(CF3SO3)2]. The formation of oxoiron(IV) species by activating dioxygen was markedly dependent on iron(II) complexes and solvents, and this observation was interpreted with the electronic effect of iron(II) complexes on dioxygen activation to form oxoiron(IV) species. A catalytic aerobic oxidation of organic substrates was demonstrated in the presence of the [Fe(TMC)]2+ complex. By carrying out 18O-labeled water experiment, we were able to conclude that the oxidation of organic substrates was mediated by an oxoiron(IV) intermediate, not by a radical type of autoxidation process.  相似文献   

12.
An iron(III)-catecholate complex [L(1) Fe(III) (DBC)] (2) and an iron(II)-o-aminophenolate complex [L(1) Fe(II) (HAP)] (3; where L(1) =tris(2-pyridylthio)methanido anion, DBC=dianionic 3,5-di-tert-butylcatecholate, and HAP=monoanionic 4,6-di-tert-butyl-2-aminophenolate) have been synthesised from an iron(II)-acetonitrile complex [L(1) Fe(II) (CH(3) CN)(2) ](ClO(4) ) (1). Complex 2 reacts with dioxygen to oxidatively cleave the aromatic C?C bond of DBC giving rise to selective extradiol cleavage products. Controlled chemical or electrochemical oxidation of 2, on the other hand, forms an iron(III)-semiquinone radical complex [L(1) Fe(III) (SQ)](PF(6) ) (2(ox) -PF(6) ; SQ=3,5-di-tert-butylsemiquinonate). The iron(II)-o-aminophenolate complex (3) reacts with dioxygen to afford an iron(III)-o-iminosemiquinonato radical complex [L(1) Fe(III) (ISQ)](ClO(4) ) (3(ox) -ClO(4) ; ISQ=4,6-di-tert-butyl-o-iminobenzosemiquinonato radical) via an iron(III)-o-amidophenolate intermediate species. Structural characterisations of 1, 2, 2(ox) and 3(ox) reveal the presence of a strong iron?carbon bonding interaction in all the complexes. The bond parameters of 2(ox) and 3(ox) clearly establish the radical nature of catecholate- and o-aminophenolate-derived ligand, respectively. The effect of iron?carbon bonding interaction on the dioxygen reactivity of biomimetic iron-catecholate and iron-o-aminophenolate complexes is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The reactivity of [HO-(tpa)Fe(V)=O] (TPA=tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine), derived from O-O bond heterolysis of its [H(2)O-(tpa)Fe(III)-OOH] precursor, was explored by means of hybrid density functional theory. The mechanism for alkane hydroxylation by the high-valent iron-oxo species invoked as an intermediate in Fe(tpa)/H(2)O(2) catalysis was investigated. Hydroxylation of methane and propane by HO-Fe(V)=O was studied by following the rebound mechanism associated with the heme center of cytochrome P450, and it is demonstrated that this species is capable of stereospecific alkane hydroxylation. The mechanism proposed for alkane hydroxylation by HO-Fe(V)=O accounts for the experimentally observed incorporation of solvent water into the products. An investigation of the possible hydroxylation of acetonitrile (i.e., the solvent used in the experiments) shows that the activation energy for hydrogen-atom abstraction by HO-Fe(V)=O is rather high and, in fact, rather similar to that of methane, despite the similarity of the H-CH(2)CN bond strength to that of the secondary C-H bond in propane. This result indicates that the kinetics of hydrogen-atom abstraction are strongly affected by the cyano group and rationalizes the lack of experimental evidence for solvent hydroxylation in competition with that of substrates such as cyclohexane.  相似文献   

14.
A Rosa  G Ricciardi 《Inorganic chemistry》2012,51(18):9833-9845
The methane hydroxylation reaction by a Compound II (Cpd II) mimic PorFe(IV)=O and its hydrosulfide-ligated derivative [Por(SH)Fe(IV)=O](-) is investigated by density functional theory (DFT) calculations on the ground triplet and excited quintet spin-state surfaces. On each spin surface both the σ- and π-channels are explored. H-abstraction is invariably the rate-determining step. In the case of PorFe(IV)=O the H-abstraction reaction can proceed either through the classic π-channel or through the nonclassical σ-channel on the triplet surface, but only through the classic σ-mechanism on the quintet surface. The barrier on the quintet σ-pathway is much lower than on the triplet channels so the quintet surface cuts through the triplet surfaces and a two state reactivity (TSR) mechanism with crossover from the triplet to the quintet surface becomes a plausible scenario for C-H bond activation by PorFe(IV)=O. In the case of the hydrosulfide-ligated complex the H-abstraction follows a π-mechanism on the triplet surface: the σ* is too high in energy to make a σ-attack of the substrate favorable. The σ- and π-channels are both feasible on the quintet surface. As the quintet surface lies above the triplet surface in the entrance channel of the oxidative process and is highly destabilized on both the σ- and π-pathways, the reaction can only proceed on the triplet surface. Insights into the electron transfer process accompanying the H-abstraction reaction are achieved through a detailed electronic structure analysis of the transition state species and the reactant complexes en route to the transition state. It is found that the electron transfer from the substrate σ(CH) into the acceptor orbital of the catalyst, the Fe-O σ* or π*, occurs through a rather complex mechanism that is initiated by a two-orbital four-electron interaction between the σ(CH) and the low-lying, oxygen-rich Fe-O σ-bonding and/or Fe-O π-bonding orbitals of the catalyst.  相似文献   

15.
Hirao H  Li F  Que L  Morokuma K 《Inorganic chemistry》2011,50(14):6637-6648
It has recently been shown that the nonheme oxoiron(IV) species supported by the 1,4,8,11-tetramethyl-1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane ligand (TMC) can be generated in near-quantitative yield by reacting [Fe(II)(TMC)(OTf)(2)] with a stoichiometric amount of H(2)O(2) in CH(3)CN in the presence of 2,6-lutidine (Li, F.; England, J.; Que, L., Jr. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 2134-2135). This finding has major implications for O-O bond cleavage events in both Fenton chemistry and nonheme iron enzymes. To understand the mechanism of this process, especially the intimate details of the O-O bond cleavage step, a series of density functional theory (DFT) calculations and analyses have been carried out. Two distinct reaction paths (A and B) were identified. Path A consists of two principal steps: (1) coordination of H(2)O(2) to Fe(II) and (2) a combination of partial homolytic O-O bond cleavage and proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET). The latter combination renders the rate-limiting O-O cleavage effectively a heterolytic process. Path B proceeds via a simultaneous homolytic O-O bond cleavage of H(2)O(2) and Fe-O bond formation. This is followed by H abstraction from the resultant Fe(III)-OH species by an ?OH radical. Calculations suggest that path B is plausible in the absence of base. However, once 2,6-lutidine is added to the reacting system, the reaction barrier is lowered and more importantly the mechanistic path switches to path A, where 2,6-lutidine plays an essential role as an acid-base catalyst in a manner similar to how the distal histidine or glutamate residue assists in compound I formation in heme peroxidases. The reaction was found to proceed predominantly on the quintet spin state surface, and a transition to the triplet state, the experimentally known ground state for the TMC-oxoiron(IV) species, occurs in the last stage of the oxoiron(IV) formation process.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanism of the generation of dioxygen at the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II (PSII), a crucial step in photosynthesis, is still under debate. The simplest unit present in the OEC that can produce O2 is a dinuclear oxo-bridge manganese complex within the tetranuclear Mn4 cluster. In this paper we report a theoretical study of the model complexes [Mn2(mu-O)2(NH3)6(H2O)2]n+ (n = 2-5), for which density functional calculations have been carried out for several electronic configurations. The molecular orbital picture deduced from the calculations indicates that one-electron oxidation of the Mn2IV,IV/(O2-)2 complex (n = 4) mostly affects the oxygen atoms, thus ruling out the existence of a MnV oxidation state in this context, while the incipient formation of an O-O bond in the O2(3-) transient species evolves exothermally toward the dissociation of dioxygen and a Mn2II,III couple. These results identify the electronic features that could be needed to enable an intramolecular mechanism of oxygen-oxygen bond formation to exist at the OEC during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

17.
A detailed density functional theory examination of the reaction of an iron porphyrin chlorite dismutase model complex with chlorite was performed. We find that the molecular oxygen production observed occurs via the formation of η(1)-Fe(III) chlorite species, followed by the formation of O═Fe(IV) (compound II) and chlorine monoxide through homolytic bond cleavage. Chlorine monoxide then rebounds to form Fe(III)-peroxyhypochlorite followed by subsequent loss of chloride and loss of dioxygen accompanied by spin conversion to produce the Fe(III) complex and complete the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

18.
Iron(II)-phenylpyruvate complexes of tetradentate tris(6-methyl-2-pyridylmethyl)amine (6-Me3-TPA) and tridentate benzyl bis(2-quinolinylmethyl)amine (Bn-BQA) were prepared to gain insight into C-C bond cleavage catalyzed by dioxygenase enzymes. The complexes we have prepared and characterized are [Fe(6-Me3-tpa)(prv)][BPh4] (1), [Fe2(6-Me3-tpa)2(pp)][(BPh4)2] (2), and [Fe2(6-Me3-tpa)2(2'-NO2-pp)][(BPh4)2] (3), [Fe(6-Me3-tpa)(pp-Me)][BPh4] (4), [Fe(6-Me3-tpa)(CN-pp-Et)][BPh4] (5), and [Fe(Bn-bqa)(pp)] (8), in which PRV is pyruvate, PP is the enolate form of phenylpyruvate, 2'-NO2-PP is the enolate form of 2'-nitrophenylpyruvate, PP-Me is the enolate form of methyl phenylpyruvate, and CN-PP-Et is the enolate form of ethyl-3-cyanophenylpyruvate. The structures of mononuclear complexes 1 and 5 were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Both the PRV ligand in 1 and the CN-PP-Et ligand in 5 bind to the iron(II) center in a bidentate manner and form 5-membered chelate rings, but the alpha-keto moiety is in the enolate form in 5 with concomitant loss of a C-H(beta) proton. The PP ligands of 2, 3, 4, and 8 react with dioxygen to form benzaldehyde and oxalate products, which indicates that the C2-C3 PP bond is cleaved, in contrast to cleavage of the C1-C2 bond previously observed for complexes that do not contain alpha-ketocarboxylate ligands in the enolate form. These reactions serve as models for metal-containing dioxygenase enzymes that catalyze the cleavage of aliphatic C-C bonds.  相似文献   

19.
The 1:1 inclusion complex of 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphinato iron(II) (Fe(II)TPPS) and an O-methylated beta-cyclodextrin dimer having a pyridine linker (1) binds dioxygen reversibly in aqueous solution. The O2 adduct was very stable (t(1/2) = 30.1 h) at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. ESI-MS and NMR spectroscopic measurements and molecular mechanics (MM) calculations indicated the inclusion of the sulfonatophenyl groups at the 5- and 15-positions of Fe(III)TPPS or Fe(II)TPPS into two cyclodextrin moieties of 1 to form a supramolecular 1:1 complex (hemoCD1 for the Fe(II)TPPS complex), whose iron center is completely covered by two cyclodextrin moieties. Equilibrium measurements and laser flash photolysis provided the affinities ( and ) and rate constants for O2 and CO binding of hemoCD1 (k(O2)(on), k(O2)(off), k(CO)(on), and k(CO)(off)). The CO affinity relative to the O2 affinity of hemoCD1 was abnormally high. Although resonance Raman spectra suggested weak back-bonding of d(pi)(Fe) --> pi(CO) and hence a weak CO-Fe bond, the CO adduct of hemoCD1 was very stable. The hydrophobic CO molecule dissociated from CO-hemoCD1 hardly breaks free from a shallow cleft in hemoCD1 surrounded by an aqueous bulk phase leading to fast rebinding of CO to hemoCD1. Isothermal titration calorimetry furnished the association constant (K(O2)), DeltaH degrees , and DeltaS degrees for O2 association to be (2.71 +/- 0.51) x 10(4) M(-1), -65.2 +/- 4.4 kJ mol(-1), and -133.9 +/- 16.1 J mol(-1) K(-1), respectively. The autoxidation of oxy-hemoCD1 was accelerated by H+ and OH-. The inorganic anions also accelerated the autoxidation of oxy-hemoCD1. The O2-Fe(II) bond is equivalent to the O2.--Fe(III) bond, which is attacked by the inorganic anions or the water molecule to produce met-hemoCD1 and a superoxide anion.  相似文献   

20.
Density functional theory using the B3LYP hybrid functional has been employed to investigate the reactivity of Fe(TPA) complexes (TPA = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine), which are known to catalyze stereospecific hydrocarbon oxidation when H(2)O(2) is used as oxidant. The reaction pathway leading to O-O bond heterolysis in the active catalytic species Fe(III)(TPA)-OOH has been explored, and it is shown that a high-valent iron-oxo intermediate is formed, where an Fe(V) oxidation state is attained, in agreement with previous suggestions based on experiments. In contrast to the analogous intermediate [(Por.)Fe(IV)=O](+1) in P450, the TPA ligand is not oxidized, and the electrons are extracted almost exclusively from the mononuclear iron center. The corresponding homolytic O-O bond cleavage, yielding the two oxidants Fe(IV)=O and the OH. radical, has also been considered, and it is shown that this pathway is inaccessible in the hydrocarbon oxidation reaction with Fe(TPA) and hydrogen peroxide. Investigations have also been performed for the O-O cleavage in the Fe(III)(TPA)-alkylperoxide species. In this case, the barrier for O-O homolysis is found to be slightly lower, leading to loss of stereospecificity and supporting the experimental conclusion that this is the preferred pathway for alkylperoxide oxidants. The difference between hydroperoxide and alkylperoxide as oxidant derives from the higher O-O bond strength for hydrogen peroxide (by 8.0 kcal/mol).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号