Abstract
Two kinds of novel cytochrome P450 models, which have alkanethiolate axial ligands and hydroxyl groups inside molecular cavities, were designed and synthesized as functional O(2) binding systems. A superstructured porphyrin, designated as "twin-coronet" porphyrin, was used as the common framework of the model complexes. This porphyrin bears four binaphthalene bridges on the both sides and forms two pockets surrounded by the bulky aromatic rings. Thiobenzyloxy and thioglycolate moieties, which contain an alkanethiolate group exhibiting various electron-donating abilities and degrees of bulkiness, were covalently linked to twin-coronet porphyrin to yield thiolate-coordinated hemes, TCP-TB and TCP-TG (twin-coronet porphyrin with thiobenzyloxy and thioglycolate groups), respectively. Both ferric complexes exhibited high stability during usual experimental manipulation under air and were characterized by MS, UV/vis, ESR spectroscopies, and CV. The ESR spectra exhibited low-spin signals (TCP-TB: g = 2.334, 2.210, 1.959; TCP-TG: g = 2.313, 2.209, 1.966). The cyclic voltammogram of TCP-TB in CH(3)CN gave a quasi-reversible wave which corresponds to the Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox couple: E(p)()(/2) = -1.35 V (vs Fc/Fc(+)). On the other hand, TCP-TG showed a fine reversible wave: E(1/2) (Fe(III)/Fe(II)) = -1.12 V. The stable dioxygen adducts were formed in the reaction of the ferric complexes with KO(2) under an oxygen atmosphere and characterized by UV/vis and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies. In the RR spectra, the nu(O--O) bands of the dioxygen adducts were observed at 1138 cm(-1) (TCP-TB) and 1137 cm(-1) (TCP-TG). The hypothesis that hydrogen bonding between the bound oxygen and the hydroxyl groups of the binaphthyl moieties could increase their stability was verified by RR spectroscopy. When all hydroxyl groups were deuterated, only the frequencies of the nu(O--O) bands were upshifted by 2 cm(-1) without any perturbation in the porphyrin skeleton. This work shows the first direct evidence for a hydrogen bond to dioxygen in an oxy form of a thiolate-coordinated heme model system. These results are discussed in context of the process of dioxygen binding and activation in cytochrome P450.
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