Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.41, No.25, 6754-6760, 2002
Oxidation of organic sulfides by vanadium haloperoxidase model complexes
In addition to halide oxidation, the vanadium haloperoxidases are capable of oxidizing sulfides to sulfoxides. Four vanadium complexes with tripodal amine ligands, K[VO(O-2)(heida)] (1), VO2(bpg) (2), K[VO2(ada)] (3), and K-2[VO(O-2)(nta)] (4), previously shown to perform bromide oxidation (Colpas, G, J; Hamstra, B. J.; Kampf, J, W.; Pecoraro, V. L. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1996, 118, 3469-3477), have now been shown to oxidize aryl alkyl sulfides to the corresponding sulfoxides. The oxidation was observed by the disappearance of thioanisole's ultraviolet absorption at 290 nm, by the change in the aromatic region of the H-1 NMR spectrum of the sulfides, and by changes in the complexes' V-51 NMR spectra. The amount of methyl phenyl sulfide oxidized in 3 h was 1000 equiv (per metal complex). The oxidation product is almost exclusively sulfoxide, with very little sulfone (less than 3% over a 3 h experiment) formed. This is consistent with an electrophilic oxidation mechanism, as had been proposed for oxidation of bromide by 1-4. The rate was found to be first order in substrate concentration, similar to the rate law observed for bromide oxidation. Unlike the bromide oxidation, the equivalent of acid required for peroxovanadium complex activation is not consumed. The complexes 1-4 are not reactive with styrene or cyclooctene. The relevance of these reactions to the mechanism of the vanadium haloperoxidases and, more generally, peroxovanadium oxygenation of sulfides will be discussed.