Cysteinate oxygenation is intimately tied to the function of both cysteine dioxygenases (CDOs) and nitrile hydratases (NHases), and yet the mechanisms by which sulfurs are oxidized by these enzymes are unknown, in part because intermediates have yet to be observed. Herein, we report a five-coordinate bis-thiolate ligated Fe(III) complex, [FeIII(S2Me2N3-(Pr,Pr))]+ (2), that reacts with oxo atom donors (PhIO, IBX-ester, and H2O2) to afford a rare example of a singly oxygenated sulfenate, [FeIII(η2-SMe2O)(SMe2)N3(Pr,Pr)]+ (5), resembling both a proposed intermediate in the CDO catalytic cycle and the essential NHase Fe-S(O)Cys114 proposed to be intimately involved in nitrile hydrolysis. Comparison of the reactivity of 2 with that of a more electron-rich, crystallographically characterized derivative, [FeIIIS2Me2NMeN2amide(Pr,Pr)]− (8), shows that oxo atom donor reactivity correlates with the metal ion’s ability to bind exogenous ligands. Density functional theory calculations suggest that the mechanism of S-oxygenation does not proceed via direct attack at the thiolate sulfurs; the average spin-density on the thiolate sulfurs is approximately the same for 2 and 8, and Mulliken charges on the sulfurs of 8 are roughly twice those of 2, implying that 8 should be more susceptible to sulfur oxidation. Carboxamide-ligated 8 is shown to be unreactive towards oxo atom donors, in contrast to imine-ligated 2. Azide (N3−) is shown to inhibit sulfur oxidation with 2, and a green intermediate is observed, which then slowly converts to sulfenate-ligated 5. This suggests that the mechanism of sulfur oxidation involves initial coordination of the oxo atom donor to the metal ion. Whether the green intermediate is an oxo atom donor adduct, Fe-O═I-Ph, or an Fe(V)═O remains to be determined.
Scheme1.(a) Schematic of the broader mechanistic problem with traditional ensembleanalytical techniques. (b) Twom echanistic hypotheses for solvent effects in organozinc synthesis.
Contrary to prevailing thought, the salt content of supernatants is found to dictate reactivity differences of different preparation methods of Rieke zinc toward oxidative addition of organohalides. This conclusion is established through combined singleparticle microscopy and ensemble spectroscopy experiments, coupled with careful removal or keeping of the supernatants during Rieke zinc preparations. Fluorescence microscopy experiments with single-Riekezinc-particle resolution determined the microscale surface reactivity of the Rieke zinc in the absence of supernatants, thus pinpointing its inherent reactivity independent of the convoluting supernatant composition. In parallel experiments, scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry characterized the zinc metal chemical composition at the bulk and single-particle levels. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy kinetics characterized bench-scale Rieke zinc reactivity in the presence and absence of different supernatants and exogenous salt additives. Together, these experiments show that the differences in reactivity from sodium-reduced vs lithium-reduced Rieke zinc arise from the residual salts in the supernatant rather than the differing salt compositions of the solids. This supernatant salt also determines the structure of the ultimate organozinc product, generating either the diorganozinc or monoorganozinc halide complex. That different organozinc complexes formed upon direct insertion to different preparations of Rieke zinc was not previously reported, despite Rieke zinc's widespread use. These findings impact organozinc-reagent and nanomaterial synthesis by showing that, unexpectedly, desired Rieke zinc reactivity can be achieved through simple addition of soluble salts to solutions that were used to prepare the metalsa substantially easier synthetic manipulation than solid composition and morphology control.
Yields of organoindium reagents synthesized from indium metal were previously reported to be highly dependent on metal batch and supplier due to the presence or absence of anticaking agent. Here, single-particle fluorescence microscopy established that MgO, an additive in some batches nominally for anticaking, significantly increased the physisorption of small-molecule organics onto the surface of the resulting MgO-coated indium metal particles. An inert and relatively nonpolar boron dipyrromethene fluorophore with a hydrocarbon tail provided a sensitive probe for this surface physisorption. SEM images revealed markedly different surface properties of indium particles either with or without MgO, consistent with their different physisorption properties observed by fluorescence microscopy. We further documented incomplete commercial bottle labeling regarding the presence and composition of this anticaking agent, both within our laboratory and previously in the literature, which may complicate reproducibility between laboratories. Trimethylsilyl chloride pretreatment, a step employed in a subset of reported synthetic procedures, removed the anticaking agent and produced particles with similar physisorption properties as commercial batches of indium powder distributed without the anticaking agent. These data indicate the possibility of an additional substrate/catalyst physisorption mechanism by which the anticaking agent may be influencing synthetic procedures that generate organoindium reagents from indium metal, in addition to simple anticaking.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.