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Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.127, No.21, 7952-7960, 2005
Theoretical and experimental investigations on the reactions of positively charged phenyl radicals with aromatic amino acids
The chemical behavior of positively charged phenyl radicals 3-dehydro-N-phenylpyridinium (a), N-(3-dehydro-5-chlorophenyl)pyridinium (b), and N-(3-dehydrophenyl)pyridinium (c) toward L-tyrosine, phenylalanine, and tryptophan was investigated in the gas phase both theoretically by performing molecular orbital calculations and experimentally by using FT/ICR mass spectrometry. All radicals react with phenylalanine and tryptophan nearly at the collision rate. The overall reactivity of the radicals toward tyrosine follows the order a > b > c, which is consistent with the electron affinity (EA) ordering of the radicals. The higher the electrophilicity (or EA) of the radical, the greater the reactivity. As expected, all radicals abstract a hydrogen atom from all of the amino acids. However, the most electrophilic radical a was also found to react with these amino acids via NH2 abstraction. A new reaction observed between radicals a-c and aromatic amino acids is the addition of the radical to the aromatic ring of the amino acid followed by C alpha-C beta bond cleavage, which leads to side-chain abstraction by the radical.