Biological inorganic chemistry (bio-inorganic chemistry) is the study of inorganic elements as they are utilized in biology. The main focus is on metal ions, where we are interested in their interaction with biological ligands and important chemical properties they are able to exhibit and impart to an organism. These properties include ligand binding, catalysis, regulation, sensing defense and structural support. Interdisciplinary field of chemistry which largely focuses on the role of metal ions in the living system.
Preparation
Properties
Note
- The U-V visible spectrum of highly conjugated porphyrin ligands exhibit a strong absorption band at about 400 nm (Soret Band or B band) and several weaker bands (Q bands) at higher wavelengths (450 to 750 nm).
- Both these bands arise from transition of electron from porphyrin π HOMO to the π∗ LUMO
- It is the nature of metal center and substituents on ring that affect the energies of these transitions and intensities of bands
- Metals ions (do, d1, d2, d3 𝑜𝑟 d10) in which dπ orbitals are relatively low in energy and do not form M → L π bonds and have little effect on porphyrin π − 𝜋∗ energy gap in absorption spectrum while metal ions 𝑑𝑛 (n = 4–9) have filled dπ orbitals form metal to ligand π–bonds, this results in an increase in porphyrin π to π* energy gap & cause hypsochromic (blue shift)
Spectral changes
Note:
(S0 → S2) is the soret bond
(S0 → S1) is the Q-band
An electronic transition to higher energy state S2 is strongly allowed whereas an electronic transition to the lower energy mixed state S1 is weakly allowed
color of metalloporphyrin (either oxidized or reduced form) is due to 𝜋 (HOMO) to 𝜋* (LUMO) transitions with in porphine ring
Soret peak or soret band is an intense peak in the blue wavelength region of the visible spectrum.
HEME GROUP is a porphyrin ring with iron atom at center. The oxidation state may be +2 or +3.
Heme A: R1 = (-CH = CH2), R2 = ( C18H30OH)
Heme B: R1 = R2 = (−CH = CH2)
Heme C: R1 = R2 = (−CH(CH3)𝑆 − 𝑃𝑟𝑜𝑡𝑒𝑖𝑛)
Chlorohemp: R1 =(- C(H) = O) R2 = (-CH = CH2 )
Note:
- Type A hemes are found in cytochrome a
- Type B hemes are found in hemoglobin, myoglobin, peroxidase and cytochrome b.
- Type C themes are found in cytochrome c
- Chloroheme are found in chlorocruorin
All the biological uses of heme groups are important, but the most important is the binding of dioxygen molecules.
This restricts the access to the iron atom (by a second heme) and reduces the probability of formation of hematin-like (Fe III dimer)
Recent X-rays studies have shown that oxygen is bound in a bent fashion with an Fe– O–O bond angle at 130°.
Note:
- When oxygen or carbon-monoxide binds to 6th position, iron becomes coplanar with the porphyrin and the resulting complex is diamagnetic.
- CO is a strong enough ligand to force spin pairing and result back 𝜋–bonding stabilizes the complex.
An alternative description is often considered in which bonding is in terms of low spin Fe(III) co-ordinated by superoxide (02)
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