| Literature DB >> 18001111 |
Reiner Sustmann1, Hans-Gert Korth, Diana Kobus, Jörg Baute, Karl-Heinz Seiffert, Elisabeth Verheggen, Eckhard Bill, Michael Kirsch, Herbert de Groot.
Abstract
The development of enzyme mimics of catalase which decompose hydrogen peroxide to water and molecular oxygen according to the 2:1 stoichiometry of native catalase and in aqueous solution at pH 7 and at micromolar concentrations of the enzyme model and hydrogen peroxide is reported. For this purpose, iron(III) complexes of 1,4,8,11-tetraaza[14]annulenes are prepared by various procedures. Efficacious preparations utilize reaction of the [N4] macrocyles with FeII salts in the presence of triphenylamine, followed by gentle oxidation of the FeII complexes by molecular oxygen or by tris(4-bromophenyl)aminium hexachloroantimonate. The complexes are characterized by SQUID magnetometry and by Mössbauer, EPR, and UV/vis spectrometry. In the solid state, the iron(III) center of the catalytically active complexes exists in the intermediate (quartet, S = 3/2) spin state. Several of these complexes decompose hydrogen peroxide in aqueous buffer solution at pH 7.2 at room temperature with turnover numbers between 40 and 80. The apparent second-order rate constant for hydrogen peroxide decomposition is in the range of 1400-2400 M(-1) s(-1), about 3 orders of magnitude lower than the value for native catalase. Besides oxygen production, a non-oxygen releasing pathway of hydrogen peroxide decomposition is unveiled.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18001111 DOI: 10.1021/ic700961b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inorg Chem ISSN: 0020-1669 Impact factor: 5.165