4.8 Article

Olefin cis-dihydroxylation versus epoxidation by non-heme iron catalysts:: Two faces of an FeIII-OOH coin

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 124, Issue 12, Pages 3026-3035

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja0120025

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM 33162] Funding Source: Medline

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The oxygenation of carbon-carbon double bonds by iron enzymes generally results in the formation of epoxides, except in the case of the Rieske dioxygenases, where cis-diols are produced. Herein we report a systematic study of olefin oxidations with H2O2 catalyzed by a group of non-heme iron complexes, i.e., [Fe-II(BPMEN)(CH3CN)(2)](2+) (1, BPMEN = N,N'-dimethyl-N,N'-bis(2-pyridylmethyl)-1,2-diaminoethane) and [Fe-II(TPA)(CH3CN)(2)](2+) (4, TPA = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine) and their 6- and 5-methyl-substituted derivatives. We demonstrate that olefin epoxidation and cis-dihydroxylation are different facets of the reactivity of a common Fe-III-OOH intermediate, whose spin state can be modulated by the electronic and steric properties of the ligand environment, Highly stereoselective epoxidation is favored by catalysts with no more than one 6-methyl substituent, which give rise to low-spin Fe-III-OOH species (category A). On the other hand, cis-dihydroxylation is favored by catalysts with more than one 6-methyl substituent, which afford high-spin Fe-III-OOH species (category B). For catalysts in category A, both the epoxide and the cis-diol product incorporate O-18 from (H2O)-O-18, results that implicate a cis-(HO)-O-18-Fe-V=O species derived from O-O bond heterolysis of a cis-(H2O)-O-18-Fe-III-OOH intermediate. In contrast, catalysts in category B incorporate both oxygen atoms from (H2O2)-O-18 into the dominant cis-diol product, via a putative Fe-III-eta(2)-OOH species. Thus, a key feature of the catalysts in this family is the availability of two cis labile sites, required for peroxide activation. The olefin epoxidation and cis-dihydroxylation studies described here not only corroborate the mechanistic scheme derived from our earlier studies on alkane hydroxylation by this same family of catalysts (Chen, K.; Que, L, Jr. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123, 6327) but also further enhance its credibility. Taken together, these reactions demonstrate the catalytic versatility of these complexes and provide a rationale for Nature's choice of ligand environments in biocatalysts that carry out olefin oxidations.

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