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1.
Iron and manganese hemes are "high-valent" when the valence state of the metal exceeds III. Redox chemistry of the high valent metal complexes involves redistribution of holes and electrons over the metal ion and the porphyrin and axial ligands, defined as valence tautomerism. Thus, catalytic pathways of heme-containing biomolecules such as peroxidases, catalases and cytochromes P450 involve valence tautomerism, as do pathways of biomimetic oxygen transfer catalysis by manganese porphyrins, robust catalysts with potential commercial value. Determinants of the site of electron abstraction are key to understanding valence tautomerism. In model systems, metal-centered oxidation is supported by hard anionic axial ligands that are also strongly pi-donating, such as oxo, aryl, bix-methoxy and bis-fluoro groups. Manganese(IV) is more stable than iron(IV) and metal-centered one-electron oxidations occur with weaker pi-donating axial ligands such as bisazido, -isocyanato, -hypochlorito and bis chloro groups. Virtually all known high-valent iron porphyrin complexes oxidized by two-electrons above the ferric state are coordinated by the strongly pi-donating oxo or nitrido ligands. In all well-characterized oxo complexes, iron is in the ferryl state and the second oxidizing equivalent resides on the porphyrin. Complexes with iron(V) have not been definitively characterized. One-electron oxidation of oxomanganese(IV) porphyrin complexes gives the oxomanganese(IV) porphyrin pi-cation redicals. In aqueous solution, oxidation of Mn(III) complexes of tetra cationic N-methylpyridiniumylporphyrin isomers by monooxygen donors yields a transient oxomanganese(V) species.  相似文献   

2.
The nature of the porphyrin pi-cation radicals in the horseradish peroxidase and bovine liver catalase (BLC) compound I species have been investigated by studying their resonance Raman spectra. A variety of laser excitation and sample interrogation procedures have been employed in order to minimize previously documented problems arising from photoinduced conversions. With Soret band excitation, the spectra obtained for both species resemble that of a compound II-like photoproduct unless the samples are excited with residence times in the microsecond regime with very low (approximately 1 milliwatt) powers. When these precautions are taken, spectra attributable to the compound I species themselves are obtained. The spectrum for horseradish peroxidase compound I is similar to that reported by Paeng and Kincaid (Paeng, K.-J., and Kincaid, J. R. (1988) Am. Chem. Soc. 110, 7913-7915) using a similar approach. Both horseradish peroxidase and BLC compound I exhibit frequency shifts relative to their compound II species that are in the direction observed for model pi-cation radicals with predominant 2A2u character. The magnitudes of these shifts are smaller than those observed for heme models that lack aromatic axial ligands, but agree well with those observed on formation of the compound I analog of N alpha-acetyl microperoxidase-8 that has His as a proximal ligand. This observation is consistent with partial delocalization of the radical density onto the proximal His-170 and Tyr-357 ligands in horseradish peroxidase and BLC, respectively. The strong ligand field provided by these ligands on the proximal side and oxo ligand on the distal side of the heme group is apparently sufficient to reverse the 2A1u radical ground state preference observed for heme-like porphyrin species (e.g. octaethylporphyrins) with weak axial fields. Enhancement of several bands assigned to the Tyr-357 ligand has also been observed for BLC compound I with 406.7-nm excitation. This is attributed either to resonance with a tyrosinate----Fe(IV) charge transfer band or to the coupling provided by radical spin delocalization onto the tyrosinate ligand.  相似文献   

3.
Myeloperoxidase compound II has been characterized by using optical absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopies. Compared to compounds II in other peroxidases, the electronic and vibrational properties of this intermediate are strongly perturbed due to the unusual active-site iron chromophore that occurs in myeloperoxidase. Despite this difference in prosthetic group, however, other properties of myeloperoxidase compound II are similar to those observed for this intermediate in the more common peroxidases (horseradish peroxidase in particular). Two forms of the myeloperoxidase intermediate species, each with distinct absorption spectra, are recognized as a function of pH. We present evidence consistent with interconversion of these two forms via a heme-linked ionization of a distal amino acid residue with a pKa congruent to 9. From resonance Raman studies of isotopically labeled species at pH 10.7, we identify an iron-oxygen stretching frequency at 782 cm-1, indicating the presence of an oxoferryl (O = FeIV) group in myeloperoxidase compound II. We further conclude that the oxo ligand is not hydrogen bonded above the pKa but possibly exhibits oxygen exchange with the medium at pH values below the pKa due to hydrogen bonding of the oxo ligand to the distal protein group.  相似文献   

4.
Zhou H  Groves JT 《Biophysical chemistry》2003,105(2-3):639-648
Synthetic hemoprotein model compounds are of great interest due to the vital roles and complexities of hemoproteins. This study reports a novel, self-assembled hemoprotein model, hemodextrin. The synthesis and characterization of py-PPCD (2(A)-monopyridylmethyl-perPEGylated-beta-cyclodextrin) (2) is described. The molecular design is based on a pegylated cyclodextrin scaffold that bears both a heme-binding pocket and an axial ligand that binds an iron porphyrin. The binding constant for Fe(III)TPPS [iron(III) meso-tetra(4-sulphonatophenyl)porphyrin] by py-PPCD (2) was determined to be 2 x 10(6) M(-1) at pH 6.0 by observing characteristic changes in the UV-Vis spectrum of the porphyrin. The pyridyl nitrogen of py-PPCD (2) was shown to ligate to the iron center by observing signal changes in the Fe(II)-porphyrin 1H-NMR spectrum. This hemodextrin ensemble was shown to bind dioxygen reversibly and to form a stable ferryl species.  相似文献   

5.
Hybrid density functional theory (DFT) calculations for the electronic and vibrational structures of compound I species with a methoxide (MeO-) (1) or cysteinate (CysS-) (2) axial ligand are carried out in order to elucidate the natures of a methoxide-coordinating new type of compound I species (Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 71 (1998) 1343) and cysteinate-coordinating compound I species of chloroperoxidase (CPO-I) and cytochrome P450s (P450-I). DFT computations of 1 and 2 demonstrate that these "anionic" ligands are a spin carrier; 70% (80%) of a spin density resides on the O (S) atom of the axial ligand and 30% (20%) is distributed on the porphyrin ring. These results suggest that for the generation of the compound I species, one electron is removed from the iron centers and the rest of the one electron is supplied from the oxidizable axial ligands instead of the iron centers or the porphyrin ring. Vibrational analyses demonstrate that the Fe=O bond is more strongly activated in 1 compared with 2 with the stretching mode at 849 cm(-1) (878 cm(-1)) for the doublet state1a (2a) and at 814 cm(-1) (875 cm(-1)) in the quartet state 1b (2b). This reverse order of the Fe=O bond strength with respect to the axial donor strength should have relevance to the significantly oxidized character of the CysS- axial ligand. In conjunction with the recent results of the extensive resonance Raman (RR) studies, some interpretations of unsettled RR results for compound I of chloroperoxidase (CPO-I) and a synthetic compound I species [O=FeIV(TMP*+)(alcohol)] (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 113 (1991) 6542) concerning the O=Fe stretching frequencies are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalyzed by a bio-inspired iron porphyrin bearing a hanging carboxylic acid group over the porphyrin ring, and a tethered axial imidazole ligand was studied by DFT calculations. BP86 free energy calculations of the redox potentials and pK a’s of reaction components involved in the proton coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions of the ferric-hydroxo and -superoxo complexes were performed based on Born–Haber thermodynamic cycle in conjunction with a continuum solvation model. The comparison was made with iron porphyrins that lack either in the hanging acid group or axial ligand, suggesting that H-bond interaction between the carboxylic acid and iron-bound hydroxo, aquo, superoxo, and peroxo ligands (de)stabilizes the Fe–O bonding, resulting in the increase in the reduction potential of the ferric complexes. The axial ligand interaction with the imidazole raises the affinity of the iron-bound superoxo and peroxo ligands for proton. In addition, a low-spin end-on ferric-hydroperoxo intermediate, a key precursor for O–O cleavage, can be stabilized in the presence of axial ligation. Thus, selective and efficient ORR of iron porphyrin can be achieved with the aid of the secondary coordination sphere and axial ligand interactions.  相似文献   

7.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to investigate the structure and environment of the heme group in bovine liver catalase compound II. Both Soret- and Q-band excitation have been employed to observe and assign the skeletal stretching frequencies of the porphyrin ring. The oxidation state marker band v4 increases in frequency from 1373 cm-1 in ferricatalase to 1375 cm-1 in compound II, consistent with oxidation of the iron atom to the Fe(IV) state. Oxidation of five-coordinate, high-spin ferricatalase to compound II is accompanied by a marked increase of the porphyrin core marker frequencies that is consistent with a six-coordinate low-spin state with a contracted core. An Fe(IV) = O stretching band is observed at 775 cm-1 for compound II at neutral pH, indicating that there is an oxo ligand at the sixth site. At alkaline pH, the Fe(IV) = O stretching band shifts to 786 cm-1 in response to a heme-linked ionization that is attributed to the distal His-74 residue. Experiments carried out in H218O show that the oxo ligand of compound II exchanges with bulk water at neutral pH, but not at alkaline pH. This is essentially the same behavior exhibited by horseradish peroxidase compound II and the exchange reaction at neutral pH for both enzymes is attributed to acid/base catalysis by a distal His residue that is believed to be hydrogen-bonded to the oxo ligand. Thus, the structure and environment of the heme group of the compound II species of catalase and horseradish peroxidase are very similar. This indicates that the marked differences in their reactivities as oxidants are probably due to the manner in which the protein controls access of substrates to the heme group.  相似文献   

8.
The catalytic cycle intermediates of heme peroxidases, known as compounds I and II, have been of long standing interest as models for intermediates of heme proteins, such as the terminal oxidases and cytochrome P450 enzymes, and for non-heme iron enzymes as well. Reports of resonance Raman signals for compound I intermediates of the oxo-iron(IV) porphyrin pi-cation radical type have been sometimes contradictory due to complications arising from photolability, causing compound I signals to appear similar to those of compound II or other forms. However, studies of synthetic systems indicated that protein based compound I intermediates of the oxoiron(IV) porphyrin pi-cation radical type should exhibit vibrational signatures that are different from the non-radical forms. The compound I intermediates of horseradish peroxidase (HRP), and chloroperoxidase (CPO) from Caldariomyces fumago do in fact exhibit unique and characteristic vibrational spectra. The nature of the putative oxoiron(IV) bond in peroxidase intermediates has been under discussion in the recent literature, with suggestions that the Fe(IV)O unit might be better described as Fe(IV)-OH. The generally low Fe(IV)O stretching frequencies observed for proteins have been difficult to mimic in synthetic ferryl porphyrins via electron donation from trans axial ligands alone. Resonance Raman studies of iron-oxygen vibrations within protein species that are sensitive to pH, deuteration, and solvent oxygen exchange, indicate that hydrogen bonding to the oxoiron(IV) group within the protein environment contributes to substantial lowering of Fe(IV)O frequencies relative to those of synthetic model compounds.  相似文献   

9.
We present a systematic investigation of how the axial ligand in heme proteins influences the geometry, electronic structure, and spin states of the active site, and the energies of the reaction cycles. Using the density functional B3LYP method and medium-sized basis sets, we have compared models with His, His+Asp, Cys, Tyr, and Tyr+Arg as found in myoglobin and hemoglobin, peroxidases, cytochrome P450, and heme catalases, respectively. We have studied 12 reactants and intermediates of the reaction cycles of these enzymes, including complexes with H(2)O, OH(-), O(2-), CH(3)OH, O(2), H(2)O(2), and HO(2)(-) in various formal oxidation states of the iron ion (II to V). The results show that His gives ~0.6 V higher reduction potentials than the other ligands. In particular, it is harder to reduce and protonate the O(2) complex with His than with the other ligands, in accordance with the O(2) carrier function of globins and the oxidative chemistry of the other proteins. For most properties, the trend Cys相似文献   

10.
An artificial peroxidase-like hemoprotein has been obtained by associating a monoclonal antibody, 13G10, and its iron(III)-alpha,alpha,alpha,beta-meso-tetrakis(ortho-carboxyphenyl)porphyrin [Fe(ToCPP)] hapten. In this antibody, about two-thirds of the porphyrin moiety is inserted in the binding site, its ortho-COOH substituents being recognized by amino-acids of the protein, and a carboxylic acid side chain of the protein acts as a general acid base catalyst in the heterolytic cleavage of the O-O bond of H2O2, but no amino-acid residue is acting as an axial ligand of the iron.We here show that the iron of 13G10-Fe(ToCPP) is able to bind, like that of free Fe(ToCPP), two small ligands such as CN-, but only one imidazole ligand, in contrast to to the iron(III) of Fe(ToCPP) that binds two. This phenomenon is general for a series of monosubstituted imidazoles, the 2- and 4-alkyl-substituted imidazoles being the best ligands, in agreement with the hydrophobic character of the antibody binding site. Complexes of antibody 13G10 with less hindered iron(III)-tetraarylporphyrins bearing only one [Fe(MoCPP)] or two meso-[ortho-carboxyphenyl] substituents [Fe(DoCPP)] also bind only one imidazole. Finally, peroxidase activity studies show that imidazole inhibits the peroxidase activity of 13G10-Fe(ToCPP) whereas it increases that of 13G10-Fe(DoCPP). This could be interpreted by the binding of the imidazole ligand on the iron atom which probably occurs in the case of 13G10-Fe(ToCPP) on the less hindered face of the porphyrin, close to the catalytic COOH residue, whereas in the case of 13G10-Fe(DoCPP) it can occur on the other face of the porphyrin. The 13G10-Fe(DoCPP)-imidazole complex thus constitutes a nice artificial peroxidase-like hemoprotein, with the axial imidazole ligand of the iron mimicking the proximal histidine of peroxidases and a COOH side chain of the antibody acting as a general acid-base catalyst like the distal histidine of peroxidases does.  相似文献   

11.
The structure-function relationship of two kinds of hemoproteins, peroxidases and peroxygenase, is discussed and a tentative model for the active site (heme vicinity) structure of each hemoprotein is proposed. The mechanism of Compound I formation from peroxidases is presumed to involve an electrophilic attack of hydroperoxide, the electrophilicity of which is increased by forming a hydrogen bond to a distal acid group (with β-equatorial arrangement) on the heme iron, the basicity of which is being increased by electron donation from the anionic fifth ligand. On the other hand, the mechanism for peroxygenase is presumed to involve a nucleophilic attack of hydroperoxide, the nucleophilicity of which is increased by forming a hydrogen bond to a distal base group (with α-axial arrangement) to the heme iron ligating the neutral fifth ligand. It is presumed that Compound I of peroxidases, which consists of porphyrin π cation radical and ferryl iron, is stabilized by a π-π type charge transfer interaction between the radical, and stacking imidazolate group (not necessarily different from the distal group) which then ionizes, and by electron donation from the anionic fifth ligand. On the other hand, Compound I of peroxygenase, which is postulated to be an oxene complex, is presumed to be stabilized by an electrostatic interaction with a strongly negative environment, and by ionization of the fifth ligand, if such can happen.  相似文献   

12.
《Inorganica chimica acta》1987,138(3):205-214
Electronic and 57Fe Mössbauer spectra are reported for two new water-soluble porphyrinato iron(III) complexes. Equilibrium constants for μ-oxo bishaem formation are calculated assuming two protons are released.Comparisons are made of the data with other porphyrinato iron(III) systems and it is shown that, in the absence of well-defined fifth ligands, the mononuclear species in acidic solution probably contain two axial water ligands. The μ-oxo bishaems do not contain water or hydroxide coordinated to iron but may hold water by hydrogen-bonding to the oxygen bridge or possibly by aquation of the porphyrin ligands.μ-Oxo bridge formation is controlled by the acid strength of the water coordinated to the iron in the mononuclear species, low pKa values assisting oxo-bridge formation. Such low pKa values are assisted by electron-attracting substituents on the porphyrin periphery. It is noted that this same property assists the stabilisation of iron(II) complexes. Steric inhibition of oxo-bridge formation requires large substituents, unsubstituted phenyl groups being apparently not large enough.  相似文献   

13.
Roach MP  Ozaki S  Watanabe Y 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1446-1454
A general inability to elucidate extensive variations in the electronic characteristics of proximal heme iron ligands in heme proteins has hampered efforts to obtain a clear understanding of the role of the proximal heme iron ligand in the activation of oxygen and peroxide. The disadvantage of the frequently applied site-directed mutagenesis technique is that it is limited by the range of natural ligands available within the genetic code. The myoglobin cavity mutant H93G [Barrick, D. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 6546-6554] has its proximal histidine ligand replaced with glycine, a mutation which leaves an open cavity capable of accommodating a variety of unnatural potential proximal ligands. We have carried out investigations of the effect of changing the electron donor characteristics of a variety of substituted imidazole proximal ligands on the rate of formation of myoglobin compound II and identified a correlation between the substituted imidazole N-3 pK(a) (which provides a measure of the electron donor ability of N-3) and the apparent rate of formation of compound II. A similar rate dependence correlation is not observed upon binding of azide. This finding indicates that O-O bond cleavage and not the preceding peroxide binding step is being influenced by the electron donor characteristics of the substituted imidazole ligands. The proximal ligand effects are clearly visible, but their overall magnitude is quite low (1.7-fold increase in the O-O bond cleavage rate per pK(a) unit). This appears to provide support for recent commentaries which concluded that the partial ionization of the proximal histidine ligand in typical heme peroxidases may not be enough of an influence to provide a mechanistically critical push effect [Poulos, T. L. (1996) JBIC, J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 1, 356-359]. Further attempts were made to define the mechanism of the influence of N-3 pK(a) on O-O bond cleavage by using peracetic acid and cumene hydroperoxide as mechanistic probes. The observation of heme destruction in these reactions indicates that displacement of the proximal imidazole ligands by peracetic acid or cumene hydroperoxide has occurred. A combination mutation (H64D/H93G) was prepared with the objective of observing compound I of H64D/H93G with substituted imidazoles as proximal ligands upon reaction with H(2)O(2). This double mutant was found to simultaneously bind imidazole to both axial positions, an arrangement which prevents a reaction with H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

14.
The N-terminus acetylated ferric hemeoctapeptide from cytochrome c, N-acetylmicroperoxidase-8 (Fe(III)-NAcMP8) can be reduced by dithionite in aqueous solution to produce Fe(II)-NAcMP8. The UV-Vis spectrum has a broad Soret band and relatively poorly defined Q bands which is consistent with a mixture of a five-coordinate high spin species with His as the axial ligand and a six-coordinate, predominantly high spin species with His/H(2)O as axial ligands. There are two spectroscopically observable pK(a)s at 8.7+/-0.1 and 10.9+/-0.2 which are attributed to ionization of a heme propionic acid group and coordinated H(2)O, respectively; a pK(a) > or = 14 is due to ionization of the proximal His ligand. Equilibrium constants were determined by UV-Vis spectrophotometry at 25.0+/-0.2 degrees C and 0.5 M ionic strength (NaClO(4)) for the coordination of imidazole and a number of substituted pyridines, and complement available data for the ferric hemepeptide, allowing a comparison to be made of the affinity of an iron porphyrin with Fe in the +2 and +3 oxidation states towards these ligands. Imidazole is coordinated more strongly by the ferric porphyrin (log K=4.08) than by the ferrous porphyrin (log K=3.40). The equilibrium constants for coordination of pyridines by the ferric and ferrous porphyrins increase and decrease, respectively, with increasing ligand basicity. Values determined by cyclic voltammetry show the same dependence on the identity of the ligand. In the ferric porphyrin, the stability of the complex increases with the basicity of the ligand and hence its ability to donate electron density onto the metal. In the case of the more electron rich ferrous porphyrin, greater stability occurs with pyridine ligands that have an electron withdrawing group and hence can accept electron density from the metal. This is consistent with the midpoint reduction potentials E(1/2) of the pyridine complexes determined by cyclic voltammetry; E(1/2) is linearly dependent on, and becomes more negative with an increase in, ligand basicity. Log K for coordination of pyridines by the ferrous hemepeptide correlates well with the energy of the ligand frontier orbital with pi symmetry, suggesting that pi-bonding effects are significant in determining the strength of binding of pyridines by a ferrous porphyrin.  相似文献   

15.
Using density functional theory calculations, we have carried out a broad survey of trigonal bipyramidal iron(III) and manganese(III) oxo, sulfido, selenido, and hydroxo complexes, with tripodal tetradentate "triureidoamine" supporting ligands. The calculations reproduce the experimentally observed high-spin states of these compounds; a multifunctional analysis suggests that the high-spin nature of these species follows largely from their trigonal bipyramidal geometry. In conjunction with earlier calculations, the present study provides a broad overview of spin density profiles in iron-oxo species in general. Iron-oxo d(pi)-p(pi) interactions invariably result in a substantial spin density on the oxygen, which in turn may be significantly tuned by hydrogen bonding interactions. The oxygen spin densities are smaller in analogous manganese-oxo species, indicating that manganese is less adept at pi-bonding than iron, which parallels earlier findings on porphyrin systems. The Fe(III)-S/Se spin density profiles provide one of the first confirmations in a transition metal context of Schleyer's prediction that the heavier p-block elements are as effective as their second-row congeners in terms of their pi-donating ability.  相似文献   

16.
The structures of the enzyme-substrate compounds of peroxidases and catalase determined by X-ray absorption spectroscopy are presented. The valence state of the iron in Compounds I and II is determined from the edge to be higher than Fe+3. A short Fe-Ne (proximal histidine) distance is observed in all forms except Compound II, forcing the Fe-Np average distance to be long, a result which differentiates the peroxidases from the oxygen transport hemoproteins and plays a pivotal role in the mechanism. A correlation is shown between the ratio of peaks in the low k (ligand field indicator ratio) region, the Fe-Np (heme pyrrole nitrogen) average distance, and the magnetic susceptibility, which provides a sensitive indicator of spin state. The mechanism of H2O2 reduction is shown by analysis of the structural changes observed in the intermediates. Possible relationship of these compounds to that of the peroxidatic form of cytochrome oxidase is suggested by these results.  相似文献   

17.
The catalysis of class III plant peroxidases is described based on the reaction scheme of horseradish peroxidase. The mechanism consists in four distinct steps: (a) binding of peroxide to the heme-Fe(III) to form a very unstable peroxide complex, Compound 0; (b) oxidation of the iron to generate Compound I, a ferryl species with a pi-cation radical in the porphyrin ring; (c) reduction of Compound I by one substrate molecule to produce a substrate radical and another ferryl species, Compound II; (d) reduction of Compound II by a second substrate molecute to release a second substrate radical and regenerate the native enzyme. Under unfavourable conditions some inactive enzyme species can be formed, known as dead-end species. Two calcium ions are normally found in plant peroxidases and appear to be important for the catalytic efficiency.  相似文献   

18.
We report density functional calculations on complexes of ferrous hemes with hydroperoxide, where the axial ligand trans to OOH(-) is imidazole, thiolate, or phenoxide. The geometrical parameters and charge distributions within the Fe-O-O-H moiety are identical between the ferrous complexes reported here and their ferric counterparts previously described, even though the latter contain one unpaired electron on iron as opposed to the former, which are diamagnetic. The extra negative charge upon going from a formally ferric state to formally ferrous appears to be distributed essentially on the porphyrin. These findings support recent experimental data showing that the ferrous state of certain hemoproteins can interact with peroxides in a catalytically competent fashion, cleaving the O-O bond heterolytically in a manner reminiscent of the "canonical" ferric-peroxo complexes, and contrary to any expectations based on the Fenton concept commonly invoked in non-heme chemistry.  相似文献   

19.
The reactions of dilute solutions of octaethylporphyrin and its iron (II) and iron (III) complexes with methyl, 2-cyanopropyl, t-butoxy, and benzoyloxy radicals are described. The results are summarized: (i) The reactivity of the porphyrin and its high-spin iron (II) and iron (III) complexes toward alkyl and t-butoxy radicals stands in the order: FeII > FeIII ? free porphyrin. For benzoyloxy radicals the order is FeII > Porp > FeIII. (ii) The exclusive path of reaction of high-spin iron (II) porphyrin with radicals is the rapid reduction of the radical and generation of an iron (III) porphyrin. The dominant path of reaction of high-spin iron (III) porphyrin with alkyl and (presumably) t-butoxy radicals is a rapid axial inner sphere reduction of the porphyrin. An axial ligand of iron is transferred to the radical. (iv) The reaction of benzoyloxy radicals with high or low-spin iron (III) porphyrins occurs primarily at the meso position. With the low-spin dipyridyl complex in pyridine the attendant reduction to iron (II) can be observed spectrally. Methyl radicals also reduce this complex by adding to the meso position. (v) The reaction of a radical with either an iron (II) or an iron (III) porphyrin results in the generation of the other valence state of iron and consequently oxidation and reduction products emanating from both iron species are obtained. (vi) No evidence for an iron (IV) is intermediate is apparent. (vii) Iron (II) porphyrins in solvents that impart either spin state are easily oxidized by diacyl peroxides. The occurrence of both axial and peripheral redox reactions with the iron complexes supports an underlying premise of a recent theory of hemeprotein reactivity. The relevance of the work to bioelectron transfer and heme catabolism is noted.  相似文献   

20.
To clarify the influence of protein surrounding on the heme reactivity in heme proteins the effect of interaction between a porphyrin ring and pi-acceptor molecule, 1,2,4-trimethyl-pyridinium (TMP), on the affinity of deuteroheme to axial ligands (imidazole and cyanide) has been studied as a model system. It is shown that TMP induces the fourfold decrease in equilibrium constant of imidazole to deuteroheme. From the analysis of the two stages for cyanide binding it is concluded that TMP decreases the binding constant of the first cyanide by 40 times and does not apparently influence the second ligand binding. The effect of TMP on the reactivity of deuteroheme to axial ligands is interpreted as a result of a decrease in the electron density on the iron orbitals which is due to the altered pi-eleectron density in the porphyrin pi-system through the donor-acceptor interaction with TMP molecules. The possible significance of the contacts between the porphyrin and neighboring amino acid residues in determining heme affinity to axial ligands is discussed.  相似文献   

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