8 research outputs found
Click-generated triazole based ferrocene-carbohydrate bioconjugates: a highly selective multisignalling probe for Cu(II) ions
Two Cu2+-specific colorimetric sensors, based on ferrocene-carbohydrate bioconjugates, 2, C46H56O20N6Fe and 3, C28H33O10N3Fe were designed and synthesized in good yields. Both the compounds, 2 and 3, behave as very selective and sensitive chromogenic and electrochemical chemosensor for Cu2+ ion in aqueous environment (CH3CN/H2O (2:8, v/v). The analytical detection limit (ADL) for receptor 2 was 7.5 Ć 10ā7 M. The considerable changes in their absorption spectra of 2 and 3 are accompanied by the appearance of a new low energy (LE) peak at 630 nm (2: Īµ = 1600 Mā1 cmā1 and 3: 822 Mā1 cmā1). This is further accompanied by a strong colour change from yellow to dark green that allows the prospective for ānaked eyeā detection of Cu2+ ion
A highly selective redox, chromogenic, and fluorescent chemosensor for Hg<sup>2+</sup> in aqueous solution based on ferroceneāglycine bioconjugates
The synthesis, electrochemical, optical, and metal-cation-sensing properties of ferroceneāglycine conjugates C<sub>30</sub>H<sub>38</sub>O<sub>8</sub>N<sub>8</sub>Fe (2) and C<sub>20</sub>H<sub>24</sub>O<sub>4</sub>N<sub>4</sub>Fe (3) have been documented. Both compounds 2 and 3 behave as very selective redox (ĪE<sub>1/2</sub> = 217 mV for 2 and ĪE<sub>1/2</sub> = 160 mV for 3), chromogenic, and fluorescent chemosensors for Hg<sup>2+</sup> cations in an aqueous environment. The considerable changes in their absorption spectra are accompanied by the appearance of a new low-energy peak at 630 nm (2, Īµ = 1600 M<sup>ā1</sup>cm<sup>ā1</sup>; 3, Īµ = 822 M<sup>ā1</sup>cm<sup>ā1</sup>). This is also accompanied by a strong color change from yellow to purple, which allows a prospective for the ānaked eyeā detection of Hg<sup>2+</sup> cations. These chemosensors present immense brightness and fluorescence enhancement (chelation-enhanced fluorescence = 91 for 2 and 42 for 3) following Hg<sup>2+</sup> coordination within the limit of detection for Hg<sup>2+</sup> at 7.5 parts per billion
The āGln-Typeā Thiol Dioxygenase from <i>Azotobacter vinelandii</i> Is a 3āMercaptopropionic Acid Dioxygenase
Cysteine dioxygenase (CDO) is a non-heme
iron enzyme that catalyzes
the O<sub>2</sub>-dependent oxidation of l-cysteine to produce
cysteinesulfinic acid. Bacterial CDOs have been subdivided as either
āArg-typeā or āGln-typeā on the basis
of the identity of conserved active site residues. To date, āGln-typeā
enzymes remain largely uncharacterized. It was recently noted that
the āGln-typeā enzymes are more homologous with another
thiol dioxygenase [3-mercaptopropionate dioxygenase (MDO)] identified
in <i>Variovorax paradoxus</i>, suggesting that enzymes
of the āGln-typeā subclass are in fact MDOs. In this
work, a putative āGln-typeā thiol dioxygenase from <i>Azotobacter vinelandii</i> (<i>Av</i>) was purified
to homogeneity and characterized. Steady-state assays were performed
using three substrates [3-mercaptopropionic acid (<i><b>3mpa</b></i>), l-cysteine (<i><b>cys</b></i>), and cysteamine (<i><b>ca</b></i>)]. Despite comparable
maximal velocities, the āGln-typeā <i>Av</i> enzyme exhibited a specificity for <i><b>3mpa</b></i> (<i>k</i><sub>cat</sub>/<i>K</i><sub>M</sub> = 72000 M<sup>ā1</sup> s<sup>ā1</sup>) nearly 2 orders
of magnitude greater than those for <i><b>cys</b></i> (110 M<sup>ā1</sup> s<sup>ā1</sup>) and <i><b>ca</b></i> (11 M<sup>ā1</sup> s<sup>ā1</sup>). Supporting X-band electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies
were performed using nitric oxide (NO) as a surrogate for O<sub>2</sub> binding to confirm obligate-ordered addition of substrate prior
to NO. Stoichimetric addition of NO to solutions of <i><b>3mpa</b></i>-bound enzyme quantitatively yields an iron-nitrosyl
species (<i>Av</i> <b>ES</b>-NO) with EPR features
consistent with a mononuclear (<i>S</i> = <sup>3</sup>/<sub>2</sub>) {FeNO}<sup>7</sup> site. Conversely, two distinct substrate-bound
conformations were observed in <i>Av</i> <b>ES</b>-NO samples prepared with <i><b>cys</b></i> and <i><b>ca</b></i>, suggesting heterogeneous binding within
the enzymatic active site. Analytical EPR simulations are provided
to establish the relative binding affinity for each substrate (<i><b>3map</b></i> > <i><b>cys</b></i> > <i><b>ca</b></i>). Both kinetic and spectroscopic
results
presented here are consistent with <i><b>3mpa</b></i> being the preferred substrate for this enzyme
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Structure of 3-mercaptopropionic acid dioxygenase with a substrate analog reveals bidentate substrate binding at the iron center.
Thiol dioxygenases are a subset of nonheme iron oxygenases that catalyze the formation of sulfinic acids from sulfhydryl-containing substrates and dioxygen. Among this class, cysteine dioxygenases (CDOs) and 3-mercaptopropionic acid dioxygenases (3MDOs) are the best characterized, and the mode of substrate binding for CDOs is well understood. However, the manner in which 3-mercaptopropionic acid (3MPA) coordinates to the nonheme iron site in 3MDO remains a matter of debate. A model for bidentate 3MPA coordination at the 3MDO Fe-site has been proposed on the basis of computational docking, whereas steady-state kinetics and EPR spectroscopic measurements suggest a thiolate-only coordination of the substrate. To address this gap in knowledge, we determined the structure of Azobacter vinelandii 3MDO (Av3MDO) in complex with the substrate analog and competitive inhibitor, 3-hydroxypropionic acid (3HPA). The structure together with DFT computational modeling demonstrates that 3HPA and 3MPA associate with iron as chelate complexes with the substrate-carboxylate group forming an additional interaction with Arg168 and the thiol bound at the same position as in CDO. A chloride ligand was bound to iron in the coordination site assigned as the O2-binding site. Supporting HYSCORE spectroscopic experiments were performed on the (3MPA/NO)-bound Av3MDO iron nitrosyl (S = 3/2) site. In combination with spectroscopic simulations and optimized DFT models, this work provides an experimentally verified model of the Av3MDO enzyme-substrate complex, effectively resolving a debate in the literature regarding the preferred substrate-binding denticity. These results elegantly explain the observed 3MDO substrate specificity, but leave unanswered questions regarding the mechanism of substrate-gated reactivity with dioxygen