Literature DB >> 31913628

Heme-FeIII Superoxide, Peroxide and Hydroperoxide Thermodynamic Relationships: FeIII-O2•- Complex H-Atom Abstraction Reactivity.

Hyun Kim1, Patrick J Rogler1, Savita K Sharma1, Andrew W Schaefer2, Edward I Solomon2, Kenneth D Karlin1.   

Abstract

Establishing redox and thermodynamic relationships between metal-ion-bound O2 and its reduced (and protonated) derivatives is critically important for a full understanding of (bio)chemical processes involving dioxygen processing. Here, a ferric heme peroxide complex, [(F8)FeIII-(O22-)]- (P) (F8 = tetrakis(2,6-difluorophenyl)porphyrinate), and a superoxide complex, [(F8)FeIII-(O2•-)] (S), are shown to be redox interconvertible. Using Cr(η-C6H6)2, an equilibrium state where S and P are present is established in tetrahydrofuran (THF) at -80 °C, allowing determination of the reduction potential of S as -1.17 V vs Fc+/0. P could be protonated with 2,6-lutidinium triflate, yielding the low-spin ferric hydroperoxide species, [(F8)FeIII-(OOH)] (HP). Partial conversion of HP back to P using a derivatized phosphazene base gave a P/HP equilibrium mixture, leading to the determination of pKa = 28.8 for HP (THF, -80 °C). With the measured reduction potential and pKa, the O-H bond dissociation free energy (BDFE) of hydroperoxide species HP was calculated to be 73.5 kcal/mol, employing the thermodynamic square scheme and Bordwell relationship. This calculated O-H BDFE of HP, in fact, lines up with an experimental demonstration of the oxidizing ability of S via hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) from TEMPO-H (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperdine-N-hydroxide, BDFE = 66.5 kcal/mol in THF), forming the hydroperoxide species HP and TEMPO radical. Kinetic studies carried out with TEMPO-H(D) reveal second-order behavior, kH = 0.5, kD = 0.08 M-1 s-1 (THF, -80 °C); thus, the hydrogen/deuterium kinetic isotope effect (KIE) = 6, consistent with H-atom abstraction by S being the rate-determining step. This appears to be the first case where experimentally derived thermodynamics lead to a ferric heme hydroperoxide OO-H BDFE determination, that FeIII-OOH species being formed via HAT reactivity of the partner ferric heme superoxide complex.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 31913628      PMCID: PMC7034651          DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b12571

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  98 in total

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Authors:  Ryan L Peterson; Jake W Ginsbach; Ryan E Cowley; Munzarin F Qayyum; Richard A Himes; Maxime A Siegler; Cathy D Moore; Britt Hedman; Keith O Hodgson; Shunichi Fukuzumi; Edward I Solomon; Kenneth D Karlin
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10.  Formation of a Reactive, Alkyl Thiolate-Ligated FeIII-Superoxo Intermediate Derived from Dioxygen.

Authors:  Maike N Blakely; Maksym A Dedushko; Penny Chaau Yan Poon; Gloria Villar-Acevedo; Julie A Kovacs
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Review 2.  Free Energies of Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer Reagents and Their Applications.

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3.  Proton-Coupled Electron-Transfer Reactivity Controls Iron versus Sulfur Oxidation in Nonheme Iron-Thiolate Complexes.

Authors:  Jesse B Gordon; Jeremy P McGale; Maxime A Siegler; David P Goldberg
Journal:  Inorg Chem       Date:  2021-04-19       Impact factor: 5.165

4.  Ferric Heme Superoxide Reductive Transformations to Ferric Heme (Hydro)Peroxide Species: Spectroscopic Characterization and Thermodynamic Implications for H-Atom Transfer (HAT).

Authors:  Hyun Kim; Patrick J Rogler; Savita K Sharma; Andrew W Schaefer; Edward I Solomon; Kenneth D Karlin
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6.  Hydrogen Atom Transfer Thermodynamics of Homologous Co(III)- and Mn(III)-Superoxo Complexes: The Effect of the Metal Spin State.

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7.  The Conversion of Superoxide to Hydroperoxide on Cobalt(III) Depends on the Structural and Electronic Properties of Azole-Based Chelating Ligands.

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8.  Proton-coupled electron transfer reactivities of electronically divergent heme superoxide intermediates: a kinetic, thermodynamic, and theoretical study.

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