4.8 Article

Spectroscopic and quantum chemical studies on low-spin FeIV=O complexes:: Fe-O bonding and its contributions to reactivity

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 129, Issue 51, Pages 15983-15996

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja074900s

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM-33162, GM40392, R01 GM040392, R01 GM033162, R01 GM040392-21, R37 GM033162, R37 GM033162-25] Funding Source: Medline

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High-valent Fe-IV=O species are key intermediates in the catalytic cycles of many mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes and have been structurally defined in model systems. Variable-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (VT-MCD) spectroscopy has been used to evaluate the electronic structures and in particular the Fe-O bonds of three Fe-IV=O (S = 1) model complexes, [Fe-IV(O)(TMC)(NCMe)](2+), [Fe-IV(O)(TMC)(OC(O)CF3)](+), and [Fe-IV(O)(N4py)](2+). These complexes are characterized by their strong and covalent Fe-O pi-bonds. The MCD spectra show a vibronic progression in the nonbonding -> pi(*) excited state, providing the Fe-O stretching frequency and the Fe-O bond length in this excited state and quantifying the pi-contribution to the total Fe-O bond. Correlation of these experimental data to reactivity shows that the [Fe-IV(O)(N4py)](2+) complex, with the highest reactivity toward hydrogen-atom abstraction among the three, has the strongest Fe-O pi-bond. Density functional calculations were correlated to the data and support the experimental analysis. The strength and covalency of the Fe-O pi-bond result in high oxygen character in the important frontier molecular orbitals (FMOs) for this reaction, the unoccupied beta-spin d(xz/yz) orbitals, that activates these for electrophilic attack. An extension to biologically relevant Fe-IV=O (S = 2) enzyme intermediates shows that these can perform electrophilic attack reactions along the same mechanistic pathway (pi-FMO pathway) with similar reactivity but also have an additional reaction channel involving the unoccupied alpha-spin d(z(2)) orbital (sigma-FMO pathway). These studies experimentally probe the FMOs involved in the reactivity of Fe-IV=O (S = 1) model complexes resulting in a detailed understanding of the Fe-O bond and its contributions to reactivity.

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