6 research outputs found

    A quantum-chemical study of the binding ability of βXaaHisGlyHis towards copper(II) ion

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    The present study analyzed binding of Cu2+ to tetrapeptides in water solution at several levels of theoretical approximation. The methods used to study the energetic and structural properties of the complexes in question include semiempirical hamiltonians, density functional theory as well as ab initio approaches including electron correlation effects. In order to shed light on the character of interactions between Cu2+ and peptides, which are expected to be mainly electrostatic in nature, decomposition of interaction energy into physically meaningful components was applied

    Impact of ring size on the copper(II) coordination abilities of cyclic tetrapeptides

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    A new, 14-membered, tetraza cyclic tetrapeptide containing histidine and lysine side-chains, c(b3homo- LysdHisb-AlaHis), was designed, synthesized and characterized; its copper(II) binding properties were investigated in dependence of pH by potentiometric and spectroscopic methods. In line with previous studies of similar systems, the progressive involvement of amide nitrogens in copper(II) coordination was evidenced for pH values greater than 6. At physiological pH the dominant species consists of a cop- per(II) center coordinated by two amide nitrogens, an imidazole nitrogen and a water molecule. In con- trast, at pH values higher than 8.7, a copper(II) coordination environment consisting of four amide nitrogens in the equatorial plane and the axial imidazole ligands is formed as clearly indicated by spec- troscopic data and theoretical calculations. The behavior of this 14-membered cyclic tetrapeptide is com- pared to that of its 12-membered cyclic analog, particular attention being paid to the effects of ring size on the respective copper(II) binding abilities

    Acid-base and metal ion binding properties of 2-thiocytidine in aqueous solution

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    The thionucleoside 2-thiocytidine (C2S) occurs in nature in transfer RNAs; it receives attention in diverse fields like drug research and nanotechnology. By potentiometric pH titrations we measured the acidity constants of H(C2S)(+) and the stability constants of the M(C2S)(2+) and M(C2S-H)(+) complexes (M2+ = Zn2+ , Cd2+), and we compared these results with those obtained previously for its parent nucleoside, cytidine (Cyd). Replacement of the (C2)=O unit by (C2)=S facilitates the release of the proton from (N3)H+ in H(C2S)(+) (pK (a) = 3.44) somewhat, compared with H(Cyd)(+) (pK (a) = 4.24). This moderate effect of about 0.8 pK units contrasts with the strong acidification of about 4 pK units of the (C4)NH2 group in C2S (pK (a) = 12.65) compared with Cyd (pK (a) approximate to 16.7); the reason for this result is that the amino-thione tautomer, which dominates for the neutral C2S molecule, is transformed upon deprotonation into the imino-thioate form with the negative charge largely located on the sulfur. In the M(C2S)(2+) complexes the (C2)S group is the primary binding site rather than N3 as is the case in the M(Cyd)(2+) complexes, though owing to chelate formation N3 is to some extent still involved in metal ion binding. Similarly, in the Zn(C2S-H)(+) and Cd(C2S-H)(+) complexes the main metal ion binding site is the (C2)S- unit (formation degree above 99.99 chelate formation with N3 must be surmised for the M(C2S-H)(+) species in accord with previous solid-state studies of related ligands. Upon metal ion binding, the deprotonation of the (C4)NH2 group (pK(a) = 12.65) is dramatically acidified (pK (a) approximate to 3), confirming the very high stability of the M(C2S-H)(+) complexes. To conclude, the hydrogen-bonding and metal ion complex forming capabilities of C2S differ strongly from those of its parent Cyd; this must have consequences for the properties of those RNAs which contain this thionucleoside
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