Publication | Closed Access
Tyrosinase Reactivity in a Model Complex: An Alternative Hydroxylation Mechanism
330
Citations
21
References
2005
Year
EngineeringMolecular BiologyOrganic ChemistryChemistryChemical BiologyEnzymatic ModificationRedox BiologyBioorganometallic ChemistryOrganometallic CatalysisRedox ChemistryStructure-function Enzyme KineticsBiochemistryBiocatalysisCatalysisSynthetic Mu-eta2Phenol Hydroxylation ReactionEnantioselective SynthesisNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisTyrosinase Reactivity-Phenolate Complex
The binuclear copper enzyme tyrosinase activates O2 to form a mu-eta2:eta2-peroxodicopper(II) complex, which oxidizes phenols to catechols. Here, a synthetic mu-eta2:eta2-peroxodicopper(II) complex, with an absorption spectrum similar to that of the enzymatic active oxidant, is reported to rapidly hydroxylate phenolates at -80 degrees C. Upon phenolate addition at extreme temperature in solution (-120 degrees C), a reactive intermediate consistent with a bis-mu-oxodicopper(III)-phenolate complex, with the O-O bond fully cleaved, is observed experimentally. The subsequent hydroxylation step has the hallmarks of an electrophilic aromatic substitution mechanism, similar to tyrosinase. Overall, the evidence for sequential O-O bond cleavage and C-O bond formation in this synthetic complex suggests an alternative intimate mechanism to the concerted or late stage O-O bond scission generally accepted for the phenol hydroxylation reaction performed by tyrosinase.
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