The protonation behavior of the iron hydrogenase active-site mimic [Fe <sub>2</sub>(μ-adt)(CO)<sub>4</sub>(PMe<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>] (1; adt = N-benzyl-azadithiolate) has been investigated by spectroscopic, electrochemical, and computational methods. The combination of an adt bridge and electron-donating phosphine ligands allows protonation of either the adt nitrogen to give [Fe<sub>2</sub>(μ-Hadt)(CO)<sub>4</sub>(PMe <sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>]<sup>+</sup> ([1H]<sup>+</sup>), the Fe-Fe bond to give [Fe<sub>2</sub>-(μ-adt)(μ-H)(CO)<sub>4</sub>(PMe<sub>3</sub>) <sub>2</sub>]<sup>+</sup> ([1Hy]<sup>+</sup>), or both sites simultaneously to give [Fe<sub>2</sub>(μ-Hadt)(μ-H)(CO)<sub>4</sub>(PMe<sub>3</sub>] <sup>2+</sup> ([1HHy]<sup>2+</sup>). Complex 1 and its protonation products have been characterized in acetonitrile solution by 1R, <sup>1</sup>H, and <sup>31</sup>P NMR spectroscopy. The solution structures of all protonation states feature a basal/basal orientation of the phosphine ligands, which contrasts with the basal/apical structure of 1 in the solid state. Density functional calcula ions have been performed on all protonation states and a comparison between calculated and experimental spectra confirms the structural assignments. The ligand protonated complex [1H]<sup>+</sup> (pK<sub>a</sub> = 12) is the initial, metastable protonation product while the hydride [1Hy] <sup>+</sup> (pK<sub>a</sub>=15) is the thermodynamically stable singly protonated form. Tautomerization of cation [1H]<sup>+</sup> to [1Hy]<sup>+</sup> does not occur spontaneously. However, it can be catalyzed by HCl (k = 2.2 M<sup>-1</sup>S<sup>-1</sup>), which results in the selective formation of cation [1Hy]<sup>+</sup>. The protonations of the two basic sites have strong mutual effects on their basicities such that the hydride (pK<sub>a</sub> = 8) and the ammonium proton (pK<sub>a</sub> = 5) of the doubly protonated cationic complex [1HHy]<sup>2+</sup> are considerably more acidic than in the singly protonated analogues. The formation of dication [1HHy]<sup>2+</sup> from cation [1H]<sup>+</sup> is exceptionally slow with perchloric or trifluoromethanesulfonic acid (k = 0.15 M<sup>-1</sup>S<sup>-1</sup>), while the dication is formed substantially faster (k&gt; 10<sup>2</sup>M <sup>-1</sup>S<sup>-1</sup>) with hydrobromic acid. Electrochemically, 1 undergoes irreversible reduction at -2.2 V versus ferrocene, and this potential shifts to -1.6, -1.1, and -1.0 V for the cationic complexes [1H]<sup>+</sup>, [1Hy]<sup>1</sup>, and [1HHy]<sup>2+</sup>, respectively, upon protonation. The doubly protonated form [1HHy]<sup>2+</sup> is reduced at less negative potential than all previously reported hydrogenase models, although catalytic proton reduction at this potential is characterized by slow turnover. © 2007 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH &amp; Co. KGaA.

Eilers, G., Schwartz, L., Stein, M., Zampella, G., DE GIOIA, L., Ott, S., et al. (2007). Ligand vs. Metal Protonation of an Iron Hydrogenase Active Site Mimic. CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, 13, 7075-7084 [10.1002/chem.200700019].

Ligand vs. Metal Protonation of an Iron Hydrogenase Active Site Mimic

ZAMPELLA, GIUSEPPE;DE GIOIA, LUCA;
2007

Abstract

The protonation behavior of the iron hydrogenase active-site mimic [Fe 2(μ-adt)(CO)4(PMe3)2] (1; adt = N-benzyl-azadithiolate) has been investigated by spectroscopic, electrochemical, and computational methods. The combination of an adt bridge and electron-donating phosphine ligands allows protonation of either the adt nitrogen to give [Fe2(μ-Hadt)(CO)4(PMe 3)2]+ ([1H]+), the Fe-Fe bond to give [Fe2-(μ-adt)(μ-H)(CO)4(PMe3) 2]+ ([1Hy]+), or both sites simultaneously to give [Fe2(μ-Hadt)(μ-H)(CO)4(PMe3] 2+ ([1HHy]2+). Complex 1 and its protonation products have been characterized in acetonitrile solution by 1R, 1H, and 31P NMR spectroscopy. The solution structures of all protonation states feature a basal/basal orientation of the phosphine ligands, which contrasts with the basal/apical structure of 1 in the solid state. Density functional calcula ions have been performed on all protonation states and a comparison between calculated and experimental spectra confirms the structural assignments. The ligand protonated complex [1H]+ (pKa = 12) is the initial, metastable protonation product while the hydride [1Hy] + (pKa=15) is the thermodynamically stable singly protonated form. Tautomerization of cation [1H]+ to [1Hy]+ does not occur spontaneously. However, it can be catalyzed by HCl (k = 2.2 M-1S-1), which results in the selective formation of cation [1Hy]+. The protonations of the two basic sites have strong mutual effects on their basicities such that the hydride (pKa = 8) and the ammonium proton (pKa = 5) of the doubly protonated cationic complex [1HHy]2+ are considerably more acidic than in the singly protonated analogues. The formation of dication [1HHy]2+ from cation [1H]+ is exceptionally slow with perchloric or trifluoromethanesulfonic acid (k = 0.15 M-1S-1), while the dication is formed substantially faster (k> 102M -1S-1) with hydrobromic acid. Electrochemically, 1 undergoes irreversible reduction at -2.2 V versus ferrocene, and this potential shifts to -1.6, -1.1, and -1.0 V for the cationic complexes [1H]+, [1Hy]1, and [1HHy]2+, respectively, upon protonation. The doubly protonated form [1HHy]2+ is reduced at less negative potential than all previously reported hydrogenase models, although catalytic proton reduction at this potential is characterized by slow turnover. © 2007 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
DFT, bio-inorganic, metallo-enzyme, hydrogenase, protonation, quantum mechanics
English
2007
13
7075
7084
none
Eilers, G., Schwartz, L., Stein, M., Zampella, G., DE GIOIA, L., Ott, S., et al. (2007). Ligand vs. Metal Protonation of an Iron Hydrogenase Active Site Mimic. CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, 13, 7075-7084 [10.1002/chem.200700019].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/368
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