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ABSTRACT: Second-coordination sphere effects such as hydrogen bonding and steric constraints that provide for specific geometric configurations play a critical role in tuning the electronic structure of metalloenzyme active sites and thus have a significant effect on their catalytic efficiency. Crystallographic characterization of vertebrate and plant sulfite oxidase (SO) suggests that an average O(oxo)-Mo-S(Cys)-C dihedral angle of approximately 77 degrees exists at the active site of these enzymes. This angle is slightly more acute (approximately 72 degrees) in the bacterial sulfite dehydrogenase (SDH) from Starkeya novella. Here we report the synthesis, crystallographic, and electronic structural characterization of Tp*MoO(mba) (where Tp* = (3,5-dimethyltrispyrazol-1-yl)borate; mba = 2-mercaptobenzyl alcohol), the first oxomolybdenum monothiolate to possess an O(ax)-Mo-S(thiolate)-C dihedral angle of approximately 90 degrees . Sulfur X-ray absorption spectroscopy clearly shows that O(ax)-Mo-S(thiolate)-C dihedral angles near 90 degrees effectively eliminate covalency contributions to the Mo(xy) redox orbital from the thiolate sulfur. Sulfur K-pre-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy intensity ratios for the spin-allowed S(1s) --> Sv(p) + Mo(xy) and S(1s) --> Sv(p) + Mo(xz,yz) transitions have been calibrated by a direct comparison of theory with experiment to yield thiolate Sv(p) orbital contributions, c(j)(2), to the Mo(xy) redox orbital and the Mo(xz,yz) orbital set. Furthermore, these intensity ratios are related to a second coordination sphere structural parameter, the O(oxo)-Mo-S(thiolate)-C dihedral angle. The relationship between Mo-S(thiolate) and Mo-S(dithiolene) covalency in oxomolydenum systems is discussed, particularly with respect to electron-transfer regeneration in SO.
Inorganic Chemistry 03/2007; 46(4):1259-67. · 4.60 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The electronic structure of cis,trans-(L-N(2)S(2))MoO(X) (where L-N(2)S(2) = N,N'-dimethyl-N,N'-bis(2-mercaptophenyl)ethylenediamine and X = Cl, SCH(2)C(6)H(5), SC(6)H(4)-OCH(3), or SC(6)H(4)CF(3)) has been probed by electronic absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and resonance Raman spectroscopies to determine the nature of oxomolybdenum-thiolate bonding in complexes possessing three equatorial sulfur ligands. One of the phenyl mercaptide sulfur donors of the tetradentate L-N(2)S(2) chelating ligand, denoted S(180), coordinates to molybdenum in the equatorial plane such that the OMo-S(180)-C(phenyl) dihedral angle is approximately 180 degrees, resulting in a highly covalent pi-bonding interaction between an S(180) p orbital and the molybdenum d(xy) orbital. This highly covalent bonding scheme is the origin of an intense low-energy S --> Mo d(xy) bonding-to-antibonding LMCT transition (E(max) approximately 16000 cm(-)(1), epsilon approximately 4000 M(-)(1) cm(-)(1)). Spectroscopically calibrated bonding calculations performed at the DFT level of theory reveal that S(180) contributes approximately 22% to the HOMO, which is predominantly a pi antibonding molecular orbital between Mo d(xy) and the S(180) p orbital oriented in the same plane. The second sulfur donor of the L-N(2)S(2) ligand is essentially nonbonding with Mo d(xy) due to an OMo-S-C(phenyl) dihedral angle of approximately 90 degrees. Because the formal Mo d(xy) orbital is the electroactive or redox orbital, these Mo d(xy)-S 3p interactions are important with respect to defining key covalency contributions to the reduction potential in monooxomolybdenum thiolates, including the one- and two-electron reduced forms of sulfite oxidase. Interestingly, the highly covalent Mo-S(180) pi bonding interaction observed in these complexes is analogous to the well-known Cu-S(Cys) pi bond in type 1 blue copper proteins, which display electronic absorption and resonance Raman spectra that are remarkably similar to these monooxomolybdenum thiolate complexes. Finally, the presence of a covalent Mo-S pi interaction oriented orthogonal to the MOO bond is discussed with respect to electron-transfer regeneration in sulfite oxidase and Mo=S(sulfido) bonding in xanthine oxidase.
Inorganic Chemistry 03/2004; 43(5):1625-37. · 4.60 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This chapter provides a detailed description of the electronic structure and spectroscopy of metallo-dithiolene complexes, which play key roles in bioinorganic chemistry and materials science. A fundamental reason that metallo-dithiolenes are of great importance to these research areas stems from a combination of the unique properties of the dithiolene ligand itself, in addition to the rich redox interplay that is found to exist between the metal and ligand. As such, the work begins with a description of intraligand dithiolene bonding in order to provide a basis for understanding complex metal-ligand interactions. The remaining chapter is divided into three principal sections: metallo-mono(dithiolenes), metallo-bis(dithiolenes), and metallo-tris(dithiolenes). A brief introduction precedes each section and provides insight into the current utility of these molecules. Additionally, a complete description of metallo-dithiolene bonding is given within each metallo-dithiolene section. This is followed by a discussion of the results of ground and excited state spectral probes of their electronic structure, allowing for their respective bonding descriptions to be evaluated in terms of the spectroscopic studies. As the unique catalytic and materials properties of metallo-dithiolenes are a direct result of their unusual and complicated electronic structures, it is hoped that the electronic structure and bonding descriptions of the centers presented here will aid in the determination of more elaborate metallo-dithiolene bonding descriptions. This is the focus of ongoing studies in our, and numerous other laboratories worldwide.
01/2004: pages 111 - 212; , ISBN: 9780471471936
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09/2000;
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ABSTRACT: Solution and solid state electronic absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and resonance Raman spectroscopies have been used to probe in detail the excited state electronic structure of LMoO(bdt) and LMoO(tdt) (L = hydrotris(3,5-dimethyl-1-pyrazolyl)borate; bdt = 1,2-benzenedithiolate; tdt = 3,4-toluenedithiolate). The observed energies, intensities, and MCD band patterns are found to be characteristic of LMoO(S-S) compounds, where (S-S) is a dithiolate ligand which forms a five-membered chelate ring with Mo. Ab initio calculations on the 1,2-ene-dithiolate ligand fragment, -SCCS-, show that the low-energy S → Mo charge transfer transitions result from one-electron promotions originating from an isolated set of four filled dithiolate orbitals that are primarily sulfur in character. Resonance Raman excitation profiles have allowed for the definitive assignment of the ene-dithiolate Sin-plane → Mo dxy charge transfer transition. This is a bonding-to-antibonding transition, and its intensity directly probes sulfur covalency contributions to the redox orbital (Mo dxy). Raman spectroscopy has identified three totally symmetric vibrational modes at 362 cm-1 (S−Mo−S bend), 393 cm-1 (S−Mo−S stretch), and 932 cm-1 (MoO stretch), in contrast to the large number low-frequency modes observed in the resonance Raman spectrum of Rhodobacter sphaeroides DMSO reductase. These results on LMoO(S-S) complexes are interpreted in the context of the mechanism of sulfite oxidase, the modulation of reduction potentials by a coordinated ene-dithiolate (dithiolene), and the orbital pathway for electron transfer regeneration of pyranopterin dithiolate Mo enzyme active sites.
03/1999;