Oxidative decarboxylation of 3,4-dihydroxymandelic acid to 3,4-dihydroxybenzaldehyde: electrochemical and HPLC analysis of the reaction mechanism.
T H Czapla, M R Claeys, T D Morgan, K J Kramer, T L Hopkins, M D Hawley
Index: Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1077(3) , 400-6, (1991)
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Abstract
Cyclic voltammetric and chronoamperometric data are consistent with a process in which 3,4-dihydroxymandelic acid (DOMA) is oxidized initially in a two-electron step to its corresponding o-benzoquinone. This species is unstable and undergoes the rate-determining loss of CO2 (k = 1.6 s-1 at pH 6 and 25 degrees C) to give an unobserved p-benzoquinone methide intermediate that rapidly isomerizes to 3,4-dihydroxybenzaldehyde (DOBAL), DOBAL is also electroactive at the applied potential and is oxidized in a two-electron step to 4-formyl-1,2-benzoquinone. Subsequent reactions of 4-formyl-1,2-benzoquinone include the oxidation of unreacted DOMA and the hydration of its aldehyde functional group. Oxidation of DOMA directly to its p-benzoquinone methide apparently does not occur. Derivatives of mandelic acid (e.g., 4-hydroxymandelic acid) that are expected to give only their corresponding p-benzoquinone methides upon oxidation afford redox behavior that differs distinctly from that for DOMA.
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