Femtosecond transient IR and visible absorption spectroscopies have been employed to investigate the excited-state photophysics of vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin, CNCbl) and the related cob(III)alamins, azidocobalamin (N3Cbl), and aquocobalamin (H2OCbl). Excitation of CNCbl, H2OCbl, or N3Cbl results in rapid formation of a short-lived excited state followed by ground-state recovery on time scales ranging from a few picoseconds to a few tens of picoseconds. The lifetime of the intermediate state is influenced by the sigma-donating ability of the axial ligand, decreasing in the order CNCbl > N3Cbl > H2OCbl, and by the polarity of the solvent, decreasing with increasing solvent polarity. The peak of the excited-state visible absorption spectrum is shifted to ca. 490 nm, and the shape of the spectrum is characteristic of weak axial ligands, similar to those observed for cob(II)alamin, base-off cobalamins, or cobinamides. Transient IR spectra of the upper CN and N3 ligands are red-shifted 20-30 cm(-1) from the ground-state frequencies, consistent with a weakened Co-upper ligand bond. These results suggest that the transient intermediate state can be attributed to a corrin ring pi to Co 3d(z2) ligand to metal charge transfer (LMCT) state. In this state bonds between the cobalt and the axial ligands are weakened and lengthened with respect to the corresponding ground states.
Protein control of cobalt-axial nitrogen ligand bond length has been proposed to modulate the reactivity of vitamin B(12) coenzyme during the catalytic cycle of B(12)-dependent enzymes. In particular, hyper-long Co-N bonds may favor homolytic cleavage of the trans-cobalt-carbon bond in the coenzyme. X-ray crystallographic studies point to hyper-long bonds in two B(12) holoenzymes; however, mixed redox and ligand states in the crystals thwart clear conclusions. Since EPR theory predicts an increase in Co(II) hyperfine splitting as donation from the axial N-donor ligand decreases, EPR spectroscopy could clarify the X-ray results. However, the theory is apparently undermined by the similar splitting reported for the 2-picoline (2-pic) and pyridine (py) adducts of Co(II) cobinamide (Co(II)Cbi(+)), adducts thought to have long and normal Co-N axial bond lengths, respectively. Cobinamides, with the B(12) 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole loop removed, are excellent B(12) models. We studied Co(II)Cbi(+) adducts of unhindered 4-substituted pyridines (4-X-py's) in ethylene glycol to separate orbital size effects from Co-N axial distance effects on these splittings. The linear increase in splitting with the decrease in 4-X-py basicity found is consistent with the theoretically predicted increase in unpaired electron spin density as axial N lone pair donation to Co(II) decreases. No adduct (and hence no hyper-long Co(II)-N axial bond) was formed even by 8 M 2-pic, if the 2-pic was purified by a novel Co(III)-affinity distillation procedure designed to remove trace nitrogenous ligand impurities present in 2-pic distilled in the regular manner. Adducts formed by impurities in 2-pic and other hindered pyridines misled previous investigators into attributing results to adducts with long Co-N bonds. We find that many 2-substituted py's known to form adducts with simple synthetic Co models do not bind Co(II)Cbi(+). Thus, the equatorial corrin ring sterically impedes binding, making Co(II)Cbi(+) a highly selective binding agent for unhindered sp(2) N-donor ligands. Our results resolve the apparent conflict between EPR experiment and theory. The reported Co(II) hyperfine splitting of the enzyme-bound cofactor in five B(12) enzymes is similar to that of the relevant free cofactor. The most reasonable interpretation of this similarity is that the Co-N axial bond of the bound cofactor is not hyper-long in any of the five cases.
We have evaluated the anti-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) activity of a series of natural and synthetic porphyrins to identify compounds that could potentially be used as microbicides to provide a defense against infection by sexually transmitted virus. For assays we used an epithelial HeLa-CD4 cell line with an integrated long terminal repeat--galactosidase gene. For structure-activity analysis, we divided the porphyrins tested into three classes: (i) natural porphyrins, (ii) metallo-tetraphenylporphyrin tetrasulfonate (metallo-TPPS4) derivatives, and (iii) sulfonated tetra-arylporphyrin derivatives. None of the natural porphyrins studied reduced infection by more than 80% at a concentration of 5 g/ml in these assays. Some metal chelates of TPPS4 were more active, and a number of sulfonated tetra-aryl derivatives showed significantly higher activity. Some of the most active compounds were the sulfonated tetranaphthyl porphyrin (TNapPS), sulfonated tetra-anthracenyl porphyrin (TAnthPS), and sulfonated 2,6-difluoro-meso-tetraphenylporphine [TPP(2,6-F2)S] and its copper chelate [TPP(2,6-F2)S,Cu], which reduced infection by 99, 96, 94, and 96%, respectively. Our observations indicate that at least some of these compounds are virucidal, i.e., that they render the virus noninfectious. The active compounds were found to inhibit binding of the HIV type 1 gp120 to CD4 and also to completely inhibit the ability of Env proteins expressed from recombinant vectors to induce cell fusion with receptor-bearing target cells. These results support the conclusion that modified porphyrins exhibit substantial activity against HIV and that their target is the HIV Env protein.
Organocobalt derivatives of tetracationic water-soluble porphyrins are difficult to prepare via the typical reductive alkylation of the Co(II)(por) (porH(2) = porphyrin ligand). None have been reported. The problem may arise because the porphyrin core is made relatively electron poor by the positively charged peripheral groups. We have circumvented this problem by using the [Co(III)(NH(3))(5)CH(3)](2+) reagent, which inserts the Co(III)-CH(3) moiety directly into porH(2) in water under basic conditions. The method afforded two new [CH(3)Co(por)](4+) derivatives, [CH(3)CoTMpyP(4)](4+) and [CH(3)CoTMAP](4+), where [TMpyP(4)](4+) and [TMAP](4+) are the coordinated, NH-deprotonated forms of meso-tetrakis(N-methyl-4-pyridiniumyl)porphyrin and meso-tetrakis(N,N,N-trimethylaniliniumyl)porphyrin, respectively. The binding of the two new [CH(3)Co(por)](4+) cations to DNA and to the synthetic DNA polymers [poly(dA-dT)](2) and [poly(dG-dC)](2) was studied. Using published criteria by which changes in DNA viscosity and in the visible and CD spectra in the Soret region can be used to assess DNA binding, we conclude that both are outside binders. A large hypochromicity of the Soret bands of the [CH(3)Co(por)](4+) cations observed upon outside binding to DNA may indicate a high degree of self-stacking. The visible absorption and CD spectra of the [CH(3)Co(por)](4+) cations in the presence of 1:1 mixtures of [poly(dA-dT)](2) and [poly(dG-dC)](2) are nearly identical to those with [poly(dA-dT)](2) alone and are very different from those of [poly(dG-dC)](2) alone. Thus, both cations show a high preference for outside binding at AT-rich over GC-rich DNA sites. Upon binding of each of the [CH(3)Co(por)](4+) cations to all of the DNA polymers, the Soret bands exhibit blue shifts, whereas the Soret bands of the corresponding [(H(2)O)(2)Co(por)](5+) cations exhibit red shifts. The blue shifts strongly suggest that the [CH(3)Co(por)](4+) cations, particularly [CH(3)CoTMAP](4+), become five-coordinate forms to some extent on DNA binding; this result is the first good evidence for the presence at equilibrium of five-coordinate CH(3)Co(III)(N(4)) forms in water.
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