Surface-Mediated Ring-Opening and Porphyrin Deconstruction via Conformational Distortion

J Am Chem Soc. 2021 Sep 22;143(37):15131-15138. doi: 10.1021/jacs.1c05348. Epub 2021 Sep 2.

Abstract

The breakdown of macrocyclic compounds is of utmost importance in manifold biological and chemical processes, usually proceeding via oxygenation-induced ring-opening reactions. Here, we introduce a surface chemical route to selectively break a prototypical porphyrin species, cleaving off one pyrrole unit and affording a tripyrrin derivative. This pathway, operational in an ultrahigh vacuum environment at moderate temperature is enabled by a distinct molecular conformation achieved via the specific interaction between the porphyrin and its copper support. We provide an atomic-level characterization of the surface-anchored tripyrrin, its reaction intermediates, and byproducts by bond-resolved atomic force microscopy, unequivocally identifying the molecular skeletons. The ring-opening is rationalized by the distortion reducing the macrocycle's stability. Our findings open a route to steer ring-opening reactions by conformational design and to study intriguing tetrapyrrole catabolite analogues on surfaces.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't