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1.
EPR absorption-derivative lineshapes have been computed and least-squares fitted to the spectrum of the intermediate derived from 5'-deoxy-5'-adenosyl-cobalamin in the ribonucleotide reductase reaction. A Gausian-type intrinsic lineshape was assumed and the effects of inhomogenous broadening, rotation of coordinate axes of the A-tensor relative to the g-tensor, angular dependence of transition probability and ligand hyperfine splitting have also been investigated.When the overall spectrum was computed as the sum of the linshapes corresponding to two distinct Co(II) species, A and B, each having rhombic asymmetry, the least squares procedure converged to a much better fit than with a single species, and matched almost all of the features of the experimental spectrum.The magnetic properties of A and B were compared with those of a series of other Co(II) complexes by a plot of g|?g6 versus ∥A6∥?∥A|∥. The results eliminate cobalt with 5-coordination to nitrogen for A and B, suggest low-spin cobalt complexes having strongly distorted 6-fold coordination. The possibility that the sixth, symmetry-decreasing ligand is the oxygen molecule is excluded by the chemistry of the system and by the EPR properties of previously reported cob(II)alamins. It is suggested that the sixth ligand is carbonyl, amide or sulfhydryl group of an enzyme sidechain which is inserted off-axis into the coordination position so as to exert the observed symmetry-lowering effect.  相似文献   

2.
The reactions with N,N-diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC) of zinc, cobalt and copper carbonic anhydrase from bovine erythrocytes were investigated. The native zinc enzyme was inhibited by DDC, but no removal of zinc could be detected even at a very high [ligand]/[protein] ratio. At identical pH values a larger inhibitory effect was found for the cobalt enzyme. The metal was removed by DDC from the protein at pH less than 7.0. No cobalt removal occurred at pH 10, where a stable ternary complex with the enzyme-bound Co(II) was detected. Its optical and EPR spectra are indicative of five-coordinate Co(II). The reaction of the Cu(II) enzyme with stoichiometric chelating agent was marked by the appearance of an electronic transition at 390 nm (epsilon = 4300 M-1 X cm-1). Metal removal from the copper enzyme readily occurred as the ligand was in excess over the metal, with parallel appearance of a band at 440 nm, which was attributed to the free Cu(II)-DDC complex. Also, in the case of the copper enzyme an alkaline pH was found to stabilize the ternary adduct with the diagnostic 390 nm band. EPR spectra showed that the ternary adduct is a mixture of two species, both characterized by the presence in the EPR spectrum of a superhyperfine structure from two protein nitrogens and by a low g parallel value, indicative of coordination to sulfur ligands. It is suggested that the two species contain the metal as penta- and hexacoordinated, respectively. Measurements of the longitudinal relaxation time, T1, of the water protons suggested that water coordination is retained in the latter case. Hexacoordination with retention of water is also proposed for the Cu(II) derivatives with the bidentate oxalate and bicarbonate anions, unlike the corresponding Co(II) derivatives, which are pentacoordinated. Different coordination of Co(II) and Cu(II) adducts may be relevant to the difference of activity of the two substituted enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Co(II)-glyoxalase I has been prepared by reactivation of apoenzyme from human erythrocytes with Co2+. The visible absorption spectrum showed maxima at 493 and 515 nm and shoulders at 465 and 615 nm. The absorption coefficients at 493 and 515 nm were 35 and 33 M-1 cm-1/cobalt ion, respectively; i.e. 70 and 66 M-1 cm-1 for the dimeric metalloprotein. The product of the enzymatic reaction, S-D-lactoylglutathione, although binding to Co(II)-glyoxalase I, had no demonstrable effect on the visible absorption spectrum, indicating binding outside the first coordination sphere of the metal. The EPR spectrum at 3.9 K was characterized by g1 approximately 6.6, g2 approximately 3.0, and g3 approximately 2.5, and eight hyperfine lines with A1 = 0.025 cm-1. Binding of the strong competitive inhibitor S-p-bromobenzylglutathione to Co(II)-glyoxalase I gave three g values: 6.3, 3.4, and 2.5, indicating a conformational change affecting the environment of the metal ion. Both optical and EPR spectra strongly suggest a high spin Co2+ with octahedral coordination in the active site of the enzyme. The similarities in kinetic properties between native Zn(II)-glyoxalase I and enzyme substituted with Mg2+, Mn2+, or Co2+ is consistent with the view that these enzyme forms have the same metal coordination in the protein.  相似文献   

4.
Citric acid represents a class of carboxylic acids present in biological fluids and playing key roles in biochemical processes in bacteria and humans. Its ability to promote diverse coordination chemistries in aqueous media, in the presence of metal ions known to act as trace elements in human metabolism, earmarks its involvement in a number of physiological functions. Cobalt is known to be a central element of metabolically important biomolecules, such as B12, and therefore its biospeciation in biological fluids constitutes a theme worthy of chemical and biological perusal. In an effort to unravel the aqueous chemistry of cobalt in the presence of a physiologically relevant ligand, citrate, the first aqueous, soluble, mononuclear complex has been synthesized and isolated from reaction mixtures containing Co(II) and citrate in a 1:2 molar ratio at pH approximately 8. The crystalline compound (NH4)4[Co(C6H5O7)2] (1) has been characterized spectroscopically (UV/vis, EPR) and crystallographically. Its X-ray structure consists of a distorted octahedral anion with two citrate ligands fulfilling the coordination requirements of the Co(II) ion. The magnetic susceptibility measurements of 1 in the range from 6 to 295 K are consistent with a high-spin complex containing Co(II) with a ground state S=3/2. Corroborating this result is the EPR spectrum of 1, which shows a signal consistent with the presence of a Co(II) system. The spectroscopic and structural properties of the complex signify its potential biological relevance and participation in speciation patterns arising under conditions consistent with those employed for its synthesis and isolation.  相似文献   

5.
The metal coordination sphere of cobalt-substituted carboxypeptidase A and its complexes with inhibitors has been characterized by X-band electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. The temperature dependence of the EPR spectrum of cobalt carboxypeptidase and the g anisotropy are consistent with a distorted tetrahedral geometry for the cobalt ion. Complexes with L-phenylalanine, a competitive inhibitor of peptide hydrolysis, as well as other hydrophobic L-amino acids all exhibit very similar EPR spectra described by three g values that differ only slightly from that of the cobalt enzyme alone. In contrast, the EPR spectra observed for the cobalt enzyme complexes with 2-(mercaptoacetyl)-D-Phe, L-benzylsuccinate, and L-beta-phenyllactate all indicate an approximately axial symmetry of the cobalt atom in a moderately distorted tetrahedral metal environment. Phenylacetate, beta-phenylpropionate, and indole-3-acetate, which exhibit mixed modes of inhibition, yield EPR spectra indicative of multiple binding modes. The EPR spectrum of the putative 2:1 inhibitor to enzyme complex is more perturbed than that of the 1:1 complex. For beta-phenylpropionate, partially resolved hyperfine coupling (122 x 10(-4) cm-1) is observed on the g = 5.99 resonance, possibly indicating a stronger metal interaction for this binding mode. The structural basis for the observed EPR spectral perturbations is discussed with reference to the existing crystallographic kinetic and electronic absorption, nuclear magnetic resonance, and magnetic circular dichroic data.  相似文献   

6.
A binuclear cobalt derivative of arthropod hemocyanin (Hc) has been prepared by the reaction of apo-Hc with Co(II) in the presence of thiocyanate. The crude product of the reaction contains specifically and adventitiously bound metal, the latter being removable by EDTA treatment. The specifically bound Co(II) constitutes a binuclear metal center that exhibits optical and CD spectra typical in their absorption maxima and extinction coefficients of Co(II) complexes with near-tetrahedral geometry. The EPR spectrum of the binuclear Co(II) derivative contains a resonance at g approximately 13, which is characteristic of integer spin systems and indicates coupled metal ions; the excess Co(II) bound to crude products exhibits an EPR signal at g approximately 4. The time course of derivative formation was followed by EPR, optical and atomic absorption techniques, and by fluorimetry. The intensity of the optical absorption in the visible region due to Co(II) increases with increasing stoichiometry of specifically bound metal [up to 2 Co(II) per protein monomer], but the intensity of the Co(II) EPR signal increases only during the formation of a mononuclear derivative. As the reaction proceeds over approximately 100 h to the formation of the binuclear derivative, the EPR signal intensity decreases to 10% of the value expected for 2 mol of EPR-active Co(II)/mol of protein. The binuclear cobalt derivative cannot be reconstituted to native Hc with Cu(I), indicating the stable loading of Co(II) in the active site. EPR and optical spectroscopic evidence is presented showing that the binuclear derivative does not bind oxygen.  相似文献   

7.
Low-temperature photodissociation of oxygen from oxy-cobalt myoglobin was studied by single-crystal electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at 5 K. The photolyzed oxy-cobalt myoglobin exhibited an EPR spectrum consisting of two nonequivalent sets (species I and II) of the principal values and eigenvectors of the g tensors: g1I = 3.55, g2I = 3.47, and g3I = 2.26 for species I, and g1II = 2.04, g2II = 1.93, and g3II = 1.86 for species II, which resembled neither the deoxy nor the oxy form. Possible models of the photodissociated state of oxy-cobalt myoglobin are proposed by comparison with cobalt porphyrin complexes. The photolyzed product of nitric oxide-cobalt myoglobin exhibited new EPR signals at g = 4.3 and a very broad signal at around g = 2. The principal g values have been determined from the single-crystal EPR measurements: g1 = 4.39, g2 = 4.27, and g3 = 4.00. Analysis of another EPR signal around g = 2 was difficult due to its broadness. Magnetic interactions were observed. An isotropic EPR signal at g = 4.3 suggested a weakly spin-coupled system between cobaltous spin (S = 1/2 or 3/2) and nitric oxide spin (S = 1/2).  相似文献   

8.
Electronic absorption, circular dichroic (CD), and magnetic circular dichroic (MCD) spectra have been determined for complexes of cobalt(II)-substituted carboxypeptidase A and five reversible inhibitors. Three of the inhibitors, N-(1-carboxy-5-butyloxycarbonylaminopentyl)-L-phenylalanine, (I); (R,S)-2-benzyl-4-oxobutanoic acid, (III); and 2-benzyl-4-oxo-5,5,5-trifluoropentanoic acid, (IV) are mechanism-based inhibitors. Another, N-(1-carboxy-5-carbobenzoxyaminopentyl)-glycyl-L-phenylalanine, (II), is a tight binding, slowly hydrolyzed substrate. The fifth, phosphoramidon, (V), is a mechanism-based inhibitor of thermolysin, and may also bind to carboxypeptidase in a mechanism-based mode. The absorption and CD spectra of the enzyme-inhibitor complexes all differ from the spectrum of the free enzyme and from each other. The MCD spectra indicate that the tetrahedral coordination geometry of cobalt, which is distorted in the free enzyme, is also distorted in the inhibitor complexes, although to various degrees. The complexes of I and III are spectrally similar despite being structurally dissimilar, and that of IV, whose structure resembles III, is spectrally distinct, indicating that I and III, but not IV, may perturb the metal in nearly the same way. The absorption spectrum of IV is identical to that, at high pH, of Co(II)carboxypeptidase in which Glu-270 has been modified by a carbodiimide reagent, possibly pointing to a common perturbation of this residue. The absorption and CD spectra of II are similar to those of the catalytic intermediate that precedes the rate-limiting step in peptide hydrolysis [D. S. Auld, A. Galdes, K. F. Geoghegan, B. Holmquist, R. Martinelli, and B. L. Vallee, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 4675-4681 (1984)]. Since II is a substrate, the steady-state bound species that it generates may therefore be a true productive intermediate rather than a nonproductive mimic of an intermediate. The spectra of the complexes with II and V differ considerably despite structural similarities. The negative CD ellipticity of the free enzyme is reversed in sign in the presence of V, a phenomenon previously observed with complexes of Co(II)carboxypeptidase and dipeptides. This resemblance may result from a similar interaction of cobalt with the phosphoramidate group of phosphoramidon and the N-terminal amine of dipeptides. The spectra of reversible, mechanism-based inhibitors permit general structural predictions about true intermediates but require caution when used for assigning precise conformation and ligands of bound catalytic species.  相似文献   

9.
Three cobalt complexes containing the salen type ligand, bis(salicylidene)-meso-1,2-diphenylethylenediaminato (mdpSal2−), are reported. The complexes differ in nuclearity and include the mononuclear, Co(mdpSal) (1), which contains a Co(II) metal center bound to one mdpSal−2 ligand frame in a square planar geometry. The second complex is the dinuclear [Co(mdpSal)Cl]2 (2) in which both cobalt ions have been oxidized to the +3 oxidation state. The overall geometry of complex 2 is an edge-sharing bioctahedron with the coordination sphere around each cobalt metal center consisting of one mdpSal−2 ligand and one Cl ion. The shared edge between the Co(III) ions contains two bridging phenolate groups, one from each ligand frame. Complex 3 is a linear, mixed valence, trinuclear species, [Co(mdpSal)(OAc)(μ-OAc)]2Co, with the oxidation states of the metal centers assigned as Co(III)-Co(II)-Co(III). The terminal Co(III) centers are equivalent with the central Co(II) lying on the inversion center of the molecule. Each cobalt ion in 3 adopts an octahedral geometry with the terminal Co(III) ions being bound to one mdpSal2− ligand each. All phenolate groups bridge to the central Co(II). The coordination sphere about each metal center in the trinuclear complex is completed by four acetate groups, two of which bind in a μ-fashion bridging from the terminal Co(III) metal centers to the central Co(II). The complexes have been characterized by X-ray crystallography as well as UV-Vis and IR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

10.
The synthesis, spectroscopic (IR, 1H and 13C NMR, UV-Vis-NIR, EPR), magnetic measurements and biological studies of a number of complexes of Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(II), Zn(II), Cd(II), Au(III) and Hg(II) of the Schiff base derived from the 1:2 condensation of 2,6-diformyl-4-methylphenol and 5-aminouracil, ((5-[[(3-[[(2,4-dioxopyrimidin-5(1H,3H)-yl)imino]methyl]-2-hydroxy-5-methylphenyl)methylene]amino]pyrimidine-2,4(1H,3H)-dione, hereafter denoted as BDF5AU) are reported. In all cases, the complexes appear to be monomeric. The deprotonated ligand in the phenolic oxygen atom shows a tridentate coordination mode through the two azomethine nitrogen atoms and the phenolic oxygen atom. The coordination of the neutral ligand takes place through the phenolic oxygen atom and one azomethine nitrogen atom and the carbonylic oxygen atom in fourth position of one uracil ring. The biological properties of some perchlorate complexes on the activity of some neutral, acid, basic and omega aminopeptidases (AP) are assayed, demonstrating a general inhibitory effect. Neutral and basic AP are mainly inhibited by Cu(II), Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes, although tyrosyl-AP is activated by Zn(II) complex. Glutamyl-AP but not aspartyl-AP is inhibited by all the complexes assayed excepting Zn(II) complex. Finally, omega AP is inhibited by Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes.  相似文献   

11.
The synthesis, characterization and catalytic activity of a series of tetra-halogeno-dimethyl salen cobalt (II) complexes are reported in this paper. The investigated complexes of cobalt (II) with Schiff bases are: αα′-di-methyl Salen cobalt (II) [Co(dMeSalen)], 3,3′,5,5′-tetra chloro α,α′-di-methyl Salen cobalt (II), [Co(tCldMeSalen)], 3,3′-di-bromo 5,5′-di-chloro α,α′-di-methyl Salen cobalt (II), [Co(tBrdMeSalen)], 3,3′,5,5′-tetra bromo α,α′-di-methyl Salen cobalt (II), [Co(tBrdMeSalen)] and 3,3′,5,5′-tetra iodo α,α′-di-methyl Salen cobalt (II), [Co(tIdMeSalen)] (where Salen is bis(salicylaldehyde)ethylenediamine). The characterization of the complexes was performed by elemental analysis, cyclic voltammetry, UV-Vis, IR and EPR spectroscopies. The study was made in DMF, and pyridine was used for coordination as axial base. The redox potential is influenced by the substituent grafted on aromatic ring and in the azomethynic position and also by the molecules coordinating in axial position (solvent, DMF, or pyridine). The catalytic oxygenation of 2,6-di-tert-butylphenol by these complexes leads to the obtention of benzoquinone and diphenoquinone products. The cobalt (II) complexes form reversible adducts with molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

12.
Raman and IR studies are carried out on carnosine (beta-alanyl-L-histidine, Carnos) and its complexes with cobalt(II) at different metal/ligand ratios and basic pH. Binuclear complexes that bind molecular oxygen are formed and information regarding the O-O bridge is obtained from the Raman spectra. When the Co(II)/Carnos ratio is 相似文献   

13.
Summary Ferredoxin fromClostridium pasteurianum substituted with two Co atoms did not give any cobalt EPR signal at 8 K as isolated, but upon reduction with sodium dithionite, a broad signal appeared withg values that indicate highspin (S=3/2) Co(II). These signals were distinct from Co(II)-dithiothreitol signals, and disappeared upon reoxidation with air. Under anaerobic incubation of apoferredoxin with Co(II), a green derivative showed a visible spectrum typical of tetrahedral Co(Il)-thiolate coordination, which shifted dramatically upon exposure to air. The1H-NMR spectrum of the aerobically isolated protein is reported at 300 MHz; magnetic susceptibility measurements were indicative of a diamagnetic species. These spectroscopic studies indicate that Co(II)-substituted ferredoxin is oxidized to low-spin Co(III)-ferredoxin in the presence of sulfide and oxygen. The diamagnetic Co(III) state could reversibly be reduced to highspin Co(II) by sodium dithionite.  相似文献   

14.
Modification of heme·heme oxygenase by iron(III) and cobalt(II) tetrasulfonated phthalocyanines has been performed. New compounds have been isolated and their properties have been investigated by difference spectroscopy, electrophoresis, molecular weight estimation, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and carboxymethylation at histidyl groups. Spectrophotometric titration data indicate the ratio of the reagents in this process to be 1:1. The visible absorption spectra show the main peak at 650 nm for the iron compound and 682 nm for the cobalt one. Electrophoresis and molecular weight estimation show both complexes to be monomers. Cobalt(II) tetrasulfonated phthalocyanine, under aerobic conditions with heme oxygenase protein, undergoes autooxidation to the cobalt(III) complex, as has been proved by EPR and spectroscopic data. Iron and cobalt phthalocyanine modified heme·heme oxygenase with excess dithionite is reduced at the phthalocyanine ligand. In the presence of oxygen, the reduction product transforms into oxygenated Fe(III)Lheme oxygenase or Co(III)heme oxygenase, respectively. Reduction of the iron(III) model complex with ascorbic acid under anaerobic conditions leads to degradation of the phthalocyanine moiety, while Co(III)heme oxygenase with ascorbic acid is reduced to Co(II)Lheme oxygenase. As has been shown by carboxymethylation of the heme oxygenase protein at the histidine residues, the predominant binding site of both phthalocyanine complexes is the heme-binding histidyl residue. There is evidence that there is a second binding site with lower affinity towards Co(II)L on the heme oxygenase protein. Iron and cobalt tetrasulfonated phthalocyanines are not able to displace heme from the heme·heme oxygenase complex. In this reaction the iron complex undergoes degradation and the cobalt one gives a hybrid compound with heme·heme oxygenaseHeme oxygenase protein complexes with iron and cobalt tetrasulfonated phthalocyanines do not exhibit activity in their oxidative degradation.  相似文献   

15.
Mononuclear neutral manganese(II) and cobalt(II) complexes with the antibiotic Sodium Monensin A (Mon-Na, 1b) were synthesized and characterized. The crystal structures of M(Mon-Na)2Cl2.H2O (M=Mn, 2; M=Co, 3) were determined by X-ray crystallography. The complexes crystallize in monoclinic space group C2 with a tetrahedrally coordinated transition metal attached to oxygen atoms of deprotonated carboxyl groups of two Sodium Monensin molecules and two chloride ions. The sodium ion remains in the cavity of the ligand and cannot be replaced by Mn(II) or Co(II). The complexes were additionally characterized by different spectroscopic techniques (UV-Visible, EPR, FAB-MS). A preferable octahedral environment around the transition metal centers is observed in polar solvents while the complexes retain their tetrahedral structure in non-polar media. The antimicrobial activity of 1b, 2 and 3 was tested against Gram(+) and Gram(-) bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
On the basis of electron spin resonance results, the 1:1 Cu(II), Co(II), Co(II)-O2, and Ni(III) complexes of bleomycin(BLM) have been compared with the corresponding metal complexes of its biosynthetic intermediate(P-3A). The present study suggests that (1) P-3A is an useful ligand for the clarification of metal-binding sites of BLM; (2) the secondary amine, pyrimidine ring nitrogen, deprotonated peptide nitrogen of histidine residue, and histidine imidazole groups as planar ligand donors, and the α-amino group as axial donor, are substantially important for metal-coordination of BLM; and (3) the sugar and bithiazole portions of BLM probably contribute to stabilization of Co(II)-O2 adduct complex and axial sixth coordination of Cu(II) and Ni(III) complexes.  相似文献   

17.
Coalpha-[alpha-(Aden-9-yl)]-Cobeta-adenosylcobamide (pseudocoenzyme B12) purified from Clostridium tetanomorphum has been reacted with ribonucleotide reductase purified from Lactobacillus leichmannii under various conditions, and the properties of the products obtained have been compared by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) with those previously reported for products formed from the normal coenzyme (adenosylcobalamin). The rapidly formed intermediate and the slowly formed "doublet" species from the pseudocoenzyme have EPR spectra identical with those formed from the normal coenzyme. This and other considerations make it less likely that the unusual magnetic properties of the rapidly formed intermediate are due to strongly distorted octahedral symmetry about Co(II) as previously postulated. Instead it is probable that the EPR spectrum is due to interaction of the radical pair by both exchange coupling and magnetic dipole--dipole coupling. Although Coalpha-[alpha-(aden-9-YL)]cob(II)amide in solution does not show superhyperfine splitting in the EPR spectrum because of its base-off configuration, the cob(II)amide formed by degradation of the pseudocoenzyme within the catalytic site of the enzyme did show triplets due to a nitrogen axially coordinated to cobalt. This suggests that binding of the cob(II)amide to the reductase catalytic site causes a shift to the base-on form.  相似文献   

18.
C Rüegg  K Lerch 《Biochemistry》1981,20(5):1256-1262
The antiferromagnetically spin-coupled copper(II) pair in Neurospora tyrosinase was substituted by cobalt, yielding a stoichiometry of 2 mol of Co/mol of protein. The low magnitude of the high-spin Co(II) EPR signal indicates spin coupling of the two Co(II) ions similar to that observed in the native enzyme. The absorption spectrum with four transitions in the visible region of intermediate intensity (epsilon 607(670), epsilon 564(630), epsilon 526(465)), a shoulder at 635 nm, and the near-infrared bands at 1180 (epsilon 30) and 960 nm (epsilon 15) indicate tetrahedral coordination around the Co(II) center. The cobalt(II) tyrosinase is enzymatically inactive, and there is no evidence that it binds molecular oxygen. Upon addition of cyanide or the competitive tyrosinase inhibitors L-mimosine, benzoic acid, or benzhydroxamic acid te absorption spectrum changes in a characteristic manner. This optical perturbation shows that binding of these inhibitors (and presumably of the substrates) occurs at or near the metal site. One Co(II) ion can be removed preferentially by incubation with KCN at high pH, indicating the two ions not to be in an identical environment.  相似文献   

19.
Co(II) derivatives of Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase having cobalt substituted for the copper (Co,Zn-superoxide dismutase and Co,Co-superoxide dismutase) were studied by optical and EPR spectroscopy. EPR and electronic absorption spectra of Co,Zn-superoxide dismutase are sensitive to solvent perturbation, and in particular to the presence of phosphate. This behaviour suggests that cobalt in Co,Zn-superoxide dismutase is open to solvent access, at variance with the Co(II) of the Cu,Co-superoxide dismutase, which is substituted for the Zn. Phosphate binding as monitored by optical titration is dependent on pH with an apparent pKa = 8.2. The absorption spectrum of Co,Zn-superoxide dismutase in water has three weak bands in the visible region (epsilon = 75 M-1 X cm-1 at 456 nm; epsilon = 90 M-1 X cm-1 at 520 nm; epsilon = 70 M-1 X cm-1 at 600 nm) and three bands in the near infrared region, at 790 nm (epsilon = 18 M-1 X cm-1), 916 nm (epsilon = 27 M-1 X cm-1) and 1045 nm (epsilon = 25 M-1 X cm-1). This spectrum is indicative of five-coordinate geometry. In the presence of phosphate, three bands are still present in the visible region but they have higher intensity (epsilon = 225 M-1 X cm-1 at 544 nm; epsilon = 315 M-1 X cm-1 at 575 nm; epsilon = 330 M-1 X cm-1 at 603 nm), whilst the lowest wavelength band in the near infrared region is at much lower energy, 1060 nm (epsilon = 44 M-1 X cm-1). The latter property suggests a tetrahedral coordination around the Co(II) centre. Addition of 1 equivalent of CN- gives rise to a stable Co(II) low-spin intermediate, which is characterized by an EPR spectrum with a highly rhombic line shape. Formation of this CN- complex was found to require more cyanide equivalents in the case of the phosphate adduct, suggesting that binding of phosphate may inhibit binding of other anions. Titration of the Co,Co-derivative with CN- provided evidence for magnetic interaction between the two metal centres. These results substantiate the contention that Co(II) can replace the copper of Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase in a way that reproduces the properties of the native copper-binding site.  相似文献   

20.
The synthesis of four guanidine-pyridine hybridligands and their spectroscopic features in MeCN are described. In order to demonstrate their coordinating properties, the corresponding cobalt(II)chloride complexes have been prepared and completely characterised by means of X-ray structure analysis, UV/Vis spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. The neutral complexes {1,1,3,3-tetramethyl-2-(quinolin-8-yl)guanidine}cobalt(II)-dichloride [Co(TMGqu)Cl2] and {N-(1,3-dimethylimidazolidin-2-yliden)pyridin-8-amine}cobalt(II)-dichloride [Co(DMEGpy)Cl2] exhibit a tetrahedral coordination of the cobalt atom, whereas in bis[chlorobis{N-(1,3-dimethylimidazolidin-2-yliden)quinolin-8-amine}cobalt(II)]tetrachlorocobaltate [Co(DMEGqu)2Cl]2[CoCl4] and chlorobis{1,1,3,3-tetramethyl-2-((pyridin-2-yl)methyl)guanidine}cobalt(II)chloride [Co(TMGpy)2Cl]Cl, the cobalt atom is coordinated in a trigonal pyramidal environment. These trigonal pyramidal complex cations represent the first bis(chelated) guanidine cobalt complexes in which the pyridine donor resides on the apical position and the guanidine donor forms with the chlorine atom the base of the pyramid. Besides the structural characterisation, the quenching effect of the cobalt(II) ion (d7) on the ligand fluorescence has been studied.  相似文献   

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