Login / Signup

Proton-coupled electron transfer of macrocyclic ring hydrogenation: The chlorinphlorin.

Rui SunMengran LiuShao Liang ZhengDilek K DogutanCyrille CostentinDaniel G Nocera
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
SignificanceThe chemical reduction of unsaturated bonds occurs by hydrogenation with H 2 as the reductant. Conversely, in biology, the unavailability of H 2 engenders the typical reduction of unsaturated bonds with electrons and protons from different cofactors, requiring olefin hydrogenation to occur by proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET). Moreover, the redox noninnocence of tetrapyrrole macrocycles furnishes unusual PCET intermediates, including the phlorin, which is an intermediate in tetrapyrrole ring reductions. Whereas the phlorin of a porphyrin is well established, the phlorin of a chlorin is enigmatic. By controlling the PCET reactivity of a chlorin, including the use of a hangman functionality to manage the proton transfer, the formation of a chlorinphlorin by PCET is realized, and the mechanism for its formation is defined.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • photodynamic therapy
  • transition metal