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    J Inorg Biochem. 2000 May 30;80(1-2):81-9.

    Biocatalytic and biomimetic oxidations with vanadium.

    Source

    Laboratory of Organic Chemistry and Catalysis, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands.

    Abstract

    Approaches to the rational design of vanadium-based semi-synthetic enzymes and biomimetic models as catalysts for enantioselective oxidations are reviewed. Incorporation of vanadate ion into the active site of phytase (E.C. 3.1.3.8), which in vivo mediates the hydrolysis of phosphate esters, afforded a semi-synthetic peroxidase. It catalyzed the enantioselective oxidation of prochiral sulfides with H2O2 affording the S-sulfoxide, e.g. in 66% ee at quantitative conversion of thioanisole. Under the reaction conditions the semi-synthetic vanadium peroxidase was stable for more than 3 days with only a slight decrease in turnover frequency. Amongst the transition-metal oxoanions that are known to be potent inhibitors of phosphatases, only vanadate resulted in a semi-synthetic peroxidase when incorporated into phytase. In a biomimetic approach, vanadium complexes of chiral Schiff base complexes were encapsulated in the super cages of a hydrophobic zeolite Y. Unfortunately, these ship-in-a-bottle complexes afforded only racemic sulfoxide in the catalytic oxidation of thioanisole with H2O2.

    PMID:
    10885467
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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