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Fragmentation of 3-hydroxyflavone; a computational and mass spectrometric study.

Rapid communications in mass spectrometry : RCM (2007-04-28)
Errol G Lewars, Raymond E March
RESUMO

In a recent study of the collision-induced dissociation of protonated and deprotonated molecules of 3-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 2'-, 3'- and 4'-hydroxyflavone, it was observed that the ratio, gamma, of the propensities for cross-ring cleavage (CRC) to ring opening (RO) varied by a factor of 660, i.e., from 0.014:1 (for deprotonated 3-hydroxyflavone) to 9.27:1 (for deprotonated 5-hydroxyflavone). An explanation for the variation of gamma was presented in terms of experimental NMR (13)C and (1)H spectra modified by computation. Deprotonated 3-hydroxyflavone exhibited the highest ion signal intensity for fragmentation following RO relative to that for CRC in that gamma = 0.014:1. Because no chemical computations of the fragmentation of protonated and deprotonated monohydroxyflavone molecules have been carried out thus far, the basis on which fragmentation mechanisms for deprotonated 3-hydroxyflavone have been proposed is principally chemical intuition. The energy states of product ions formed in the fragmentation of deprotonated 3-hydroxyflavone molecules were computed by the CBS-4M method implemented in Gaussian 03. The overly demanding calculations needed to handle diradicals reliably and directly were circumvented by a process in which each of the bond-breaking reactions was approximated by a process that gave two monoradicals. Bond energies were calculated, with one exception, from the approximation reactions as the energy of products minus the energy of reactants.