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An Iron Reservoir Model Based on Ferrichrome: Iron(III)-Binding and Metal(III)-Exchange Properties of Tripodal Monotopic and Ditopic Hydroxamate Ligands with an <scp>l</scp>-Alanyl-<scp>l</scp>-alanyl-<i>N</i>-hydroxy-β-alanyl Sequence
18
Citations
35
References
2001
Year
Tripodal MonotopicIron MetabolismDitopic Hydroxamate LigandsChemistryChemical BiologyRedox BiologyInorganic CompoundIron Reservoir ModelBioorganometallic ChemistryRedox ChemistryBiological Inorganic ChemistryInorganic ChemistryBiochemistryBiological Iron MobilizationNatural SciencesMetalloproteinCoordination ComplexHydroxamate LigandMedicine
To gain knowledge about biological iron mobilization, tripodal monotopic and ditopic hydroxamate ligands (1 and 2) are prepared, and their iron-chelating properties are investigated. Ligands 1 and 2 contain three Ala-Ala-beta-(HO)Ala units and three [Ala-Ala-beta-(HO)Ala](2) units connected with tris(alanylaminoethyl)amine, respectively, and form six-coordinate octahedral complexes with iron(III) in aqueous solution. Ligand 1 and 1 equiv of iron give Fe-1, and ligand 2 and 1 or 2 equiv of iron produce Fe(1)-2, or Fe(2)-2. These complexes exhibit absorptions at lambda(max) 425 nm of epsilon 2800-3000/Fe, characteristic of tris(hydroxamato)iron(III) complexes, and preferentially assume the Delta-cis configuration. Loading of Fe(III) on 1, 2, and M(III)-loaded ligands (M-1 and M(1)-2, M = Al, Ga, In) with ammonium ferric oxalate at pH 5.4 is performed, and the second-order rate constants of loading with respect to Fe(III) and the ligand or M(III)-loaded ligands are determined. The rates of loading of Fe(III) on M-1 increase in the order Al-1 < Ga-1 < In-1, and those on M(1)-2 in the order Al(1)-2 < Ga(1)-2 < Fe(1)-2 < In(1)-2, indicating that the dissociation tendency of M(III) ions from the hydroxamate ligand is an important factor. The iron complexes formed with 2 are subjected to an iron removal reaction with excess EDTA in aqueous pH 5.4 solution at 25.0 degrees C, and the collected data are analyzed by curve-fitting using appropriate first-order kinetic equations, providing the rate constants for the upper site and the lower site of 2. Similar analysis for FeM-2 affords removal rate constants for Fe(up)-2, M(up)-2, and Fe(low)-2, and the iron residence probability at each site. The protonation constants of the hydroxamate groups for 1 and 2 (pK(1,) pK(2), pK(3), and pK(1,) pK(2)., pK(6)) are determined, and the proton-independent stability constants for Fe-1, the upper site of Fe(2)-2, and the lower site of Fe(1)-2 are 10(28), 10(29), and 10(28.5), respectively.
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