Issue 2, 2005

Biomimetic alcohol oxidations by an iron(iii) porphyrin complex: relevance to cytochrome P-450 catalytic oxidation and involvement of the two-state radical rebound mechanism

Abstract

The systematic oxidation reactions of a wide range of alcohols have been carried out by using an iron porphyrin complex in order to understand their relation to cytochrome P-450 enzymes and to have a practical application to organic synthesis. The iron porphyrin complex catalyzed efficiently alcohol oxidation to the respective carbonyl compound via a high-valent iron-oxo porphyrin intermediate ((Porp)Fe[double bond, length as m-dash]O+). Several mechanistic studies such as isotope 18O labeling, deuterium isotope effect, linear free energy relationship, and ring-opening of radical clock substrate, have suggested that the alcohol is oxidized by a sequence of reactions involving an α-hydroxyalkyl radical intermediate and oxygen rebound to form the gem-diol, dehydration of which yields the carbonyl compounds. Moreover, it has been proposed that a two-state reactivity mechanism can also be adopted for alcohol oxidation reactions in iron porphyrin model systems as exhibited by P-450 enzymes.

Graphical abstract: Biomimetic alcohol oxidations by an iron(iii) porphyrin complex: relevance to cytochrome P-450 catalytic oxidation and involvement of the two-state radical rebound mechanism

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Sep 2004
Accepted
17 Nov 2004
First published
30 Nov 2004

Dalton Trans., 2005, 402-406

Biomimetic alcohol oxidations by an iron(III) porphyrin complex: relevance to cytochrome P-450 catalytic oxidation and involvement of the two-state radical rebound mechanism

J. H. Han, S. Yoo, J. S. Seo, S. J. Hong, S. K. Kim and C. Kim, Dalton Trans., 2005, 402 DOI: 10.1039/B414603D

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