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  4. Aqueous Oxidation of Sulfonamide Antibiotics: Aromatic Nucleophilic Substitution of an Aniline Radical Cation
 
research article

Aqueous Oxidation of Sulfonamide Antibiotics: Aromatic Nucleophilic Substitution of an Aniline Radical Cation

Tentscher, Peter Rudolf  
•
Eustis, Soren
•
McNeill, Kristopher
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2013
Chemistry - A European Journal

Sulfonamide antibiotics are an important class of organic micropollutants in the aquatic environment. For several, sulfur dioxide extrusion products have been previously reported upon photochemical or dark oxidation. Using quantum chemical modeling calculations and transient absorption spectroscopy, it is shown that single-electron oxidation from sulfadiazine produces the corresponding aniline radical cation. Density functional theory calculations indicate that this intermediate can exist in four protonation states. One species exhibits a low barrier for an intramolecular nucleophilic attack at the para position of the oxidized aniline ring, in which a pyrimidine nitrogen acts as a nucleophile. This attack can lead to a rearranged structure, which exhibits the same connectivity as the SO2-extruded oxidation product that was previously observed in the aquatic environment and characterized by NMR spectroscopy. We report a detailed reaction mechanism for this intramolecular aromatic nucleophilic substitution, and we discuss the possibility of this reaction pathway for other sulfonamide drugs.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/chem.201204005
Author(s)
Tentscher, Peter Rudolf  
Eustis, Soren
McNeill, Kristopher
Arey, J. Samuel  
Date Issued

2013

Published in
Chemistry - A European Journal
Volume

19

Issue

34

Start page

11216

End page

11223

Subjects

Electron transfer

•

nucleophilic substitution

•

radical ions

•

reaction mechanisms

•

sulfonamides

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LMCE  
Available on Infoscience
January 14, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/99510
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