Abstract

Abstract The crystal structures of the oxidized states of three of the most common biochemical reducing agents have been determined, by crystallization from aqueous solution where possible: tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine oxide (TCEP oxide, 1), bis(2-hydroxyethyl) disulfide (2MESS, 3), and tributylphosphine oxide (Bu4PO, 4). In addition, a less disordered crystal structure of the reducing agent tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphonium chloride (TCEP·HCl, 2) has been obtained. A greatly simplified method was found for synthesizing 1. An unusual method of obtaining X-ray quality crystals from hard-to-crystallize oily liquids is described, in which the oil is solidified to a glass by rapid cooling, allowed to warm to a supercooled liquid containing a few seed crystals, and finally crystallized just below its melting point. This method was successfully used to crystallize 3, a viscous oil at room temperature that had resisted all other methods of crystallization, for X-ray diffraction. An ab initio quantum chemical analysis of the conformers of 3 showed that the molecular geometry of this flexible molecule in the solid state was 320 kJ/mol higher than that of the lowest-energy conformer, underscoring the fact that the solid-state structure may not always yield the same molecular geometry as that of the minimum-energy conformer, especially for flexible molecules with strong intramolecular nonbonding interactions. The unusual NMR spectral characteristics of 4 are elucidated.

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