Huisgen's 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions become nonconcerted when copper(I) acetylides react with azides and nitrile oxides, providing ready access to 1,4-disubstituted 1,2,3-triazoles and 3,4-disubstituted isoxazoles, respectively. The process is highly reliable and exhibits an unusually wide scope with respect to both components. Computational studies revealed a stepwise mechanism involving unprecedented metallacycle intermediates, which appear to be common for a variety of dipoles.
Density functional theory geometry optimizations and reduction potential calculations are reported for all five known oxidation states of [Fe(4)S(4)(SCH(3))(4)](n)()(-) (n = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4) clusters that form the active sites of iron-sulfur proteins. The geometry-optimized structures tend to be slightly expanded relative to experiment, with the best comparison found in the [Fe(4)S(4)(SCH(3))(4)](2)(-) model cluster, having bond lengths 0.03 A longer on average than experimentally observed. Environmental effects are modeled with a continuum dielectric, allowing the solvent contribution to the reduction potential to be calculated. The calculated protein plus solvent effects on the reduction potentials of seven proteins (including high potential iron proteins, ferredoxins, the iron protein of nitrogenase, and the "X", "A", and "B" centers of photosystem I) are also examined. A good correlation between predicted and measured absolute reduction potentials for each oxidation state of the cluster is found, both for relative potentials within a given oxidation state and for the absolute potentials for all known couples. These calculations suggest that the number of amide dipole and hydrogen bonding interactions with the Fe(4)S(4) clusters play a key role in modulating the accessible redox couple. For the [Fe(4)S(4)](0) (all-ferrous) system, the experimentally observed S = 4 state is calculated to lie lowest in energy, and the predicted geometry and electronic properties for this state correlate well with the EXAFS and Mössbauer data. Cluster geometries are also predicted for the [Fe(4)S(4)](4+) (all-ferric) system, and the calculated reduction potential for the [Fe(4)S(4)(SCH(3))(4)](1)(-)(/0) redox couple is in good agreement with that estimated for experimental model clusters containing alkylthiolate ligands.
The M(N) S = (3)/(2) resting state of the FeMo cofactor of nitrogenase has been proposed to have metal-ion valencies of either Mo(4+)6Fe(2+)Fe(3+) (derived from metal hyperfine interactions) or Mo(4+)4Fe(2+)3Fe(3+) (from Mössbauer isomer shifts). Spin-polarized broken-symmetry (BS) density functional theory (DFT) calculations have been undertaken to determine which oxidation level best represents the M(N) state and to provide a framework for understanding its energetics and spectroscopy. For the Mo(4+)6Fe(2+)Fe(3+) oxidation state, the spin coupling pattern for several spin state alignments compatible with S = (3)/(2) were generated and assessed by energy and geometric criteria. The most likely BS spin state is composed of a Mo3Fe cluster with spin S(a) = 2 antiferromagnetically coupled to a 4Fe' cluster with spin S(b) = (7)/(2). This state has a low DFT energy for the isolated FeMoco cluster and the lowest energy when the interaction with the protein and solvent environment is included. This spin state also displays calculated metal hyperfine and Mössbauer isomer shifts compatible with experiment, and optimized geometries that are in excellent agreement with the protein X-ray data. Our best model for the actual spin-coupled state within FeMoco alters this BS state by a slight canting of spins and is analogous in several respects to that found in the 8Fe P-cluster in the same protein. The spin-up and spin-down components of the LUMO contain atomic contributions from Mo(4+) and the homocitrate and from the central prismane Fe sites and muS(2) atoms, respectively. This qualitative picture of the accepting orbitals for M(N) is consistent with observations from Mössbauer spectra of the one-electron reduced states. Similar calculations for the Mo(4+)4Fe(2+)3Fe(3+) oxidation state yield results that are in poorer agreement with experiment. Using the Mo(4+)6Fe(2+)Fe(3+) oxidation level as the most plausible resting state, the geometric, electronic and energetic properties of the one-electron redox transition to the oxidized state, M(OX), catalytically observed M(R) and radiolytically reduced M(I) states have also been explored.
Triazole derivatives R 0280Copper(I)-Catalyzed Synthesis of Azoles. DFT Study Predicts Unprecedented Reactivity and Intermediates. -Cu-catalyzed addition of azides or nitrile oxides to acetylenes offers an efficient, widely applicable and regiospecific approach to 1,4-disubstituted 1,2,3-triazoles and 3,5-disubstituted isoxazoles, respectively. A stepwise mechanism is revealed which involves unprecedented metallacycle intermediates. -(HIMO, F.; LOVELL, T.; HILGRAF, R.; ROSTOVTSEV, V. V.; NOODLEMAN*, L.; SHARPLESS, K. B.; FOKIN, V. V.; J.
Several models for the active site structure of class I ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) intermediate X have been studied in the work described in this paper, using broken-symmetry density functional theory (DFT) incorporated with the conductor-like screening (COSMO) solvation model. The calculated properties, including geometries, spin states, 57Fe, 1H, and 17O hyperfine tensors, Mössbauer isomer shifts, and quadrupole splittings, and the estimation of the Fe(IV) d-d transition energies have been compared with the available experimental values. On the basis of the detailed analysis and comparisons, we propose a definite form for the active site structure of class I RNR intermediate X, which contains an Fe1(III)Fe2(IV) center (where Fe1 is the iron site closer to Tyr122, and the two iron sites are high-spin antiferromagnetically coupled to give a total 1/2 net spin), two mu-oxo bridges, one terminal water which binds to Fe1(III) and also H-bonds to both side chains of Asp84 and Glu238, and one bidentate carboxylate group from the side chain of Glu115.
Broken symmetry density functional and electrostatics calculations have been used to shed light on which of three proposed atoms, C, N, or O, is most likely to be present in the center of the FeMoco, the active site of nitrogenase. At the Mo(4+)4Fe(2+)3Fe(3+) oxidation level, a central N(3-) anion results in (1) calculated Fe-N bond distances that are in very good agreement with the recent high-resolution X-ray data of Einsle et al.; (2) a calculated redox potential of 0.19 eV versus the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE) for FeMoco(oxidized) + e(-) --> FeMoco(resting), in good agreement with the measured value of -0.042 V in Azotobacter vinelandii; and (3) average Mössbauer isomer shift values (IS(av) = 0.48 mm s(-1)) compatible with experiment (IS(av) = 0.40 mm s(-1)). At the more reduced Mo(4+)6Fe(2+)1Fe(3+) level, the calculated geometry around a central N(3-) anion still correlates well with the X-ray data, but the average Mössbauer isomer shift value (IS(av) = 0.54 mm s(-1)) and the redox potential of -2.21 eV show a much poorer agreement with experiment. These calculated structural, spectroscopic, and redox data indicate the most likely iron oxidation state for the resting FeMoco of nitrogenase to be 4Fe(2+)3Fe(3+). At this favored oxidation state, oxygen or carbon coordination leads to (1) Fe-O distances in poor agreement and Fe-C distances in good agreement with experiment and (2) calculated redox potentials of +0.97 eV for O(2-) and -1.31 eV for C(4-). The calculated structural parameters and/or redox data suggest either O(2-) or C(4-) is unlikely as a central anion.
A methodology for determining the coupled redox potentials (DeltaE(redox) degrees (coupled)) of manganese and iron superoxide dismutases (Mn(Fe)SODs), from the standard redox potential of reaction (O(2)(-) + 2H(+) + e(-) --> H(2)O(2)) and the experimental kinetic rate constants of Mn(Fe)SOD proteins, has been presented for the first time. A combined density functional (DF) and electrostatic protein/reaction field (DF/electrostatics) model has also been applied to seven protein structures, to study the structural, energetic, simple redox potential, pK(a), and coupled redox potential properties associated with each active site. The quantum cluster active site models, which include the metal, first shell ligands, represented by amino acid side chains and a solvent derived ligand, and the second shell H-bonding partners, were taken from the crystal structures, and geometry was optimized in four kinds of states: oxidized (III) and reduced (II) states with either a H(2)O molecule or a OH(-) group as the fifth coordinated ligand. We conclude from the calculations that the oxidized and reduced Mn(Fe)SODs are in the Mn(3+)(Fe(3+))(OH(-)) and Mn(2+)(Fe(2+))(H(2)O) forms, respectively; proton transfers will happen in both steps of the dismutation of superoxide anion (O(2)(-)), and the proton-transfer reactions will occur prior to or concerted with the electron transfer from O(2)(-) group to the Mn(3+)(Fe(3+))SOD metal center. The DeltaE(redox) degrees (coupled) of E. coli FeSOD calculated by the DF/electrostatics method is 0.16 V, which is very close to the experimental value of 0.25 V. The absolute values of DeltaE(redox) degrees (coupled) for T. thermophilus, human wild-type, and mutant Q143N MnSODs obtained from the DF/electrostatics method are -0.25, -0.29, and -0.11 V, which present the same trend and very similar relative values to those obtained from experimental kinetic rate constants (0.40, 0.32, and 0.59 V, respectively). The order DeltaE(redox) degrees (human wild-type) < DeltaE(redox) degrees (T. thermophilus) < DeltaE(redox) degrees (E. coli) < DeltaE(redox) degrees (Q143N) for MnSOD proteins is predicted by the DF/electrostatics calculations.
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