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Micro-review Element Fe Cu S Mo V reducing environment Fe2+ (high) Cu•sulfides (low) HS- (high) [MoOnS4-n]2MoS2 (low) V3+, V4+sulfides oxidizing environment Fe3+ (low) Cu2+ (moderate) SO42- (high) MoO42(moderate) VO43-(moderate) Note switch in relative availability of Cu and Fe. A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 1 Frausto da Silva & Williams Table 1.6 Inorganic Chemistry Concepts for Bio. Thermodynamics Hard-soft acids and bases. The chelate effect. Ligand pKa depression. Redox potential tuning. Kinetic considerations. Ligand exchange rates. Electron transfer. Electronic and geometric structures. Reaction of coordinated ligands. A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 2 Hard and Soft Metal Larger, more polarizable metal ions gain extra stabilization from this capability if the ligands also share this possibility. Harder smaller metal ions’ electrostatic interactions are stronger, so bonds with similarly hard ligands are stronger. A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 3 Soft and hard metals and ligands Metal ions Hard H+, Na+, K+ Mg2+, Mn2+, Ca2+, Al3+, Cr3+, Co3+, Fe3+ Fe2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Intermed. Cu2+, Zn2+ Ligands PO43-, CO32-, ROPO32-, OH-, CH3CO2-, Cl-, RO-, NO3-, H2O, NH3, NO2-, SO3-, Br-, N3-, N2, NH N Soft A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg Cu+, Au+, Cd2+, Pb2+, Hg2+ 4 Lippard & Berg, Table 2.1 NH2 RS-, CN-, SCN-, H-, R2S, RSH, R3P, CO, NO Metallothionein: a soft-ligand protein. 1/3 of amino acids are Cys. Binds Cd2+, Hg2+, Pb2+, thus protecting the cell from them. Those metal ions otherwise bind to critical SH groups and displace other metal ions from soft ligands. A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 5 Ag-bound metallothionein. Armitage et al. 1AOO.pdb Calmodulin, a hard-ligand protein A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg Ad Bax 2HF5.pdb 6 The chelate effect M+L ML M + 2L L L M M + L~L A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 7 L~L M Kb = e-ΔGb/RT, ΔGb = ΔHb -TΔSb ΔSb is -ve K’b = e-ΔG’b/RT, ΔG’b =2ΔHb-2TΔSb K’b = e-ΔG’b/RT, ΔG’b =2ΔHb-TΔSb ΔG’b is more favourable by TΔSb ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid = EDTA O O OH H2C N HO CH2 O A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 8 HO CH2 H2 C C H2 OH N C H2 O www.3dchem.com/molecules.asp?ID=89 EDTA Based on "YMCA" by The Village People I Ligands, there’s no need to feel down, I said ligands, when you’re floating around, You don’t have to stay there, free and unbound – There’s no need to be uncomplexed! Ligands, you’ve got electron pairs, They’re not bonded - and they’re just sitting there; A cation - if you’re willing to share – Could accept your spare electrons! Chorus I You’ve got to complex like EDTA, You’ve got to complex like EDTA; It’s got everything to be hexadentate! It’s got six lone pairs to donate! You’ve got to complex like EDTA, You’ve got to complex like EDTA! It’s ethylene-dia-mine-tetra-acet-ate! It’s a ligand that can chelate! II Ligands you might bond to class b Metals - if you’re polarised easily (As are sulphur, phosphorus, iodine) And form more covalent compounds; Ligands, if you’re hard (like fluorine) You’re electronegative, so you’ll be Bound to harder metals like Al (III) A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 9 With elec-tro-stat-ic bonding! Chorus II You’ve got to complex like EDTA, You’ve got to complex like EDTA; It replaces all six H2Os separately, So the entropy must increase! You’ve got to complex like EDTA, You’ve got to complex like EDTA; It’s the chelate effect! It’s a favoured process! It’s a positive delta S! III Ligands can you act as a pi Donor? They can even stabilise high Oxidation states – they’re weak field and high Spin – the delta value’s smaller; But if the pi* are empty They’re acceptors lowering t2g And increasing the gap in energy: The ligand field splitting’s larger! Repeat Choruses I and II until bored Aimee Hartnell, February 2002 http://www.geocities.com/le_chatelier_uk/song_index.html Deprotonation of ligands The metal ion competes with protons, both are cations. Ligand & rxn. Metal ion pKA (25°C, 0.1 M) H2O + M2+ M-OH +H+ NH3 + M2+ M-NH2 + H+ none Ca2+, Mn2+, Cu2+, Zn2+ none Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+ none Mg2+, CH3COOH + Ca2+, Ni2+, M-OOCCH3 +H+ Cu2+ none HN 2+ Co2+, NH + M HN + Ni2+, + H N Cu2+ A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 10 Lippard & Berg, Table 2.2 M2+ 14.0 13.4 11.1 10.7 10.0 35.0 32.9 30.7 32.2 4.7 4.2 4.2 4.0 3.0 7.0 4.6 4.0 3.8 Formation of Fe clusters coupled to deprotonation of coordinated OHH2O H2O H2O H2O H2O H2O - OH Fe3+ OH HO- H2O Fe3+ HO- H2O H2O H2O pKA ~ 6 A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 11 - OH Fe3+ Fe3+ H2O H2O O2- H2O H2O O2- H2O H2O H2O Fe3+ H2O H2O H2O Fe3+ O2- H2O H2O H2O H2O + H2O Coordination to a metal ion also makes ligands more susceptible to nucleophilic attack. H2 N H2 N OH- M O M O OR H2 N O C H O O A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 12 O - H His-N Zn2+ H N-His + H+ O - 2+ Zn His-N C + His-N + ROH O OR O His-N M OH N-His Proximity or template effect. O Reduction Midpoint Potentials Cu2+(O-sal)2en + e- → Cu+(O-sal)2en Em = -1.21 V Em = -ΔGreduction/nF , F is Faraday’s constant 96.5 J/V•mol, n is the number of eso Em corresponds to ΔG/electron transferred. -0.74 V Cu2+(iPr-sal)2 + e→ Cu+(iPr-sal)2 Cu+(O-sal)2en + Cu2+(iPr-sal)2 Em -1.21 V → Cu Cu2+(O-sal)2en + e→ Cu+(O-sal)2en A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 13 2+(O-sal) 2en + Cu+(iPr-sal)2 Em = -0.74 V + 1.21 V = 0.47 V Ligands tune the metal’s Em: sterics and hard-soft effects Compound Em vs. NHE* Cu(O-sal)2en -1.21 V Cu(Me-sal)2 -0.90 V Cu(Et-sal)2 -0.86 V Cu(S-sal)2en -0.83 V Cu(i-Pr-sal)2 -0.74 V Cu(t-Bu-sal)2 -0.066 V A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 14 R O N Cu N O R Cu(R-sal)2 X X Cu N N Cu(X-sal)2en Lippard and Berg, Table 2.4 *NHE: normal H electrode: 2H+ + 2 e- H2 Redox tuning tools Coordination geometry Ligand natures Polarization of ligands by H-bonds Local dielectric (in the event of net charge change). Proteins can impose a coordination geometry / ligand ID on a metal ion, paying the energetic cost of doing so from the energetic stability of the overall protein structure. A.-F. Miller, 2008, pg 15