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1.
The structure of a derivative of coenzyme F430 from methanogenic bacteria, the bromide salt of 12,13-diepi-F430 pentamethyl ester ( 5 , X = Br), was determined by X-ray structure analysis. It reveals a more pronounced saddle-shaped out-of-plane deformation of the macrocycle than any hydroporphinoid Ni complex investigated so far. The crystal structure confirms the constitution proposed for coenzyme F430 ( 2 ) and shows that in the epimer 5 , the three stereogenic centers in ring D, C(17), C(18), and C(19), have the (17S)-, (18S)-, and (19R)-configuration, respectively. Deuteration and 2D-NMR studies independently demonstrate that native coenzyme F430 (2) has the same configuration in ring D as the epimer 5 . Therefore, our original tentative assignment of configuration at C(19) and C(18) [1] has to be reversed. This completes the assignment of configuration for all stereogenic centers in coenzyme F430, which has the structure shown in Formula 2 .  相似文献   

2.
The UV-visible and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of MCR(red1), the catalytically active state of methyl-coenzyme M reductase, are almost identical to those observed when free coenzyme F430 or its pentamethyl ester (F430M) are reduced to the Ni(I) valence state. Investigations and proposals concerning the catalytic mechanism of MCR were therefore based on MCR(red1) containing Ni(I)F430 until, in a recent report, Tang et al. (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124, 13242) interpreted their resonance Raman data and titration experiments as indicating that, in MCR(red1), coenzyme F430 is not only reduced at the nickel center but at one of the C=N double bonds of the hydrocorphinoid macrocycle as well. To resolve this contradiction, we have investigated the stoichiometry of the reduction of coenzyme F430 pentamethyl ester (F430M) by three independent methods. Spectroelectrochemistry showed clean reduction to a single product that exhibits the UV-vis spectrum typical for MCR(red1). In three bulk electrolysis experiments, 0.96 +/- 0.1 F/mol was required to generate the reduced species. Reduction with decamethylcobaltocene in tetrahydrofuran (THF) consumed 1 mol of (Cp)(2)Co/mol of F430M, and the stoichiometry of the reoxidation of the reduced form with the two-electron oxidant methylene blue was 0.46 +/- 0.05 mol of methylene blue/mol of reduced F430M. These experiments demonstrate that the reduction of coenzyme F430M to the species having almost identical UV-vis and EPR spectra as MCR(red1) is a one-electron process and therefore inconsistent with a reduction of the macrocycle chromophore.  相似文献   

3.
F430M, the pentamethyl ester of coenzyme F430, can be oxidized reversibly by one electron. The oxidation potential has been determined, and the electrolytically prepared oxidation product was characterized by its UV/VIS and ESR spectrum. The strongly anisotropic and nearly axial ESR spectrum is consistent with a S = ½ species with the unpaired-electron spin density predominantly in a d-type orbital of the central nickel ion. The properties of Ni(III)F430M are discussed in the context of two hypothetical mechanisms for the catalytic role of coenzyme F430 in methyl coenzyme M reductase, which catalyses the last step of methane formation in methanogenic bacteria.  相似文献   

4.
Factor F430 from Methanogenic Bacteria: On the Nature of the Isolation Artefacts of F430, a Contribution to the Chemistry of F430 and the Conformational Stereochemistry of the Ligand Periphery of Hydroporphinoid Nickel(II) Complexes Factor F430 ( 1 ), a coenzyme from methanogenic bacteria, when heated in aqueous solution isomerizes to 12,13-di-epi-F430 ( 5 ) via 13-epi-F430 ( 3 ). The equilibrium mixture of the three F430 isomers in aqueous phosphate buffer solution (pH 7, 100°) contains 88 % of 5 , 8 % of 3 , and 4 % of 1 (Scheme 1). The structural assignment for the F430 isomers rests on FAB-MS-, UV/VIS-, 1H- and 13C-NMR spectra of their pentamethyl esters. Chemical proof for the double epimerization at the two chiral centers of F430's ring C was provided by ozonolytic degradation of the di-epimer to give a ring-C-derived succinimide derivative that was shown to be the enantiomer of the one previously obtained by ozonolysis of F430M (see Scheme 2). The two F430 ring-C epimers 3 and 5 are the isolation artefacts described in the earlier F430 literature. F430 is susceptible to autoxidation in air and the product, that absorbs at 560 nm, was shown to be the 12,13-didehydro derivative 8 of F430 by spectroscopic characterization of its pentamethyl ester 9 . The dehydrogenation product 8 can be diastereoselectively reduced with Zn in AcOH to give natural F430 as the main product rather than the thermodynamically more stable F430-di-epimer (Scheme 3). In the double epimerization of F430, the two ring-C side chains change from a trans-quasi-diaxial arrangement to the (locally) enantiomorphic position in which the same side chains are again in a trans-quasi-diaxial arrangement. This equilibrium paradox as well as the kinetic diastereoselectivity of the reduction of 12,13-didehydro-F430 ( 8 ) are rationalized to be consequences of the general phenomenon documented earlier (see the preceding paper) according to which hydroporphinoid Ni(II) complexes all show a characteristic conformational ruffling of their ligand system due to the tendency of the (small) Ni(II) ion to contract the size of the ligand's central coordination hole (see Fig. 5 and 6).  相似文献   

5.
Methanogenic archaea utilize a specific pathway in their metabolism, converting C1 substrates (i.e., CO2) or acetate to methane and thereby providing energy for the cell. Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the key step in the process, namely methyl-coenzyme M (CH3-S-CoM) plus coenzyme B (HS-CoB) to methane and CoM-S-S-CoB. The active site of MCR contains the nickel porphinoid F430. We report here on the coordinated ligands of the two paramagnetic MCR red2 states, induced when HS-CoM (a reversible competitive inhibitor) and the second substrate HS-CoB or its analogue CH3-S-CoB are added to the enzyme in the active MCR red1 state (Ni(I)F430). Continuous wave and pulse EPR spectroscopy are used to show that the MCR red2a state exhibits a very large proton hyperfine interaction with principal values A((1)H) = [-43,-42,-5] MHz and thus represents formally a Ni(III)F430 hydride complex formed by oxidative addition to Ni(I). In view of the known ability of nickel hydrides to activate methane, and the growing body of evidence for the involvement of MCR in "reverse" methanogenesis (anaerobic oxidation of methane), we believe that the nickel hydride complex reported here could play a key role in helping to understand both the mechanism of "reverse" and "forward" methanogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
Coenzyme F430 pentamethyl ester 2 was partially hydrolyzed to a mixture of the five F430 tetramethyl esters 7 – 11 , which were separated by HPLC and identified by means of a full NMR characterization. The tetramethyl ester with a free COOH group at the side chain at C(3) of F430 was coupled to the N‐terminus of the peptidic spacer? ligand construct 12 selected and studied as described before. The UV/VIS and NMR spectra in CH2Cl2/3,3,3‐trifluoroethanol 6 : 1 show that the new derivative, the NiII(33‐dehydroxy‐83,122,133,182‐tetra‐O‐methyl‐F430‐33‐yl)‐L ‐prolyl‐L ‐prolyl‐Nπ‐methyl‐L ‐histidine methyl ester ( 13 ), is an intramolecular, pentacoordinate, paramagnetic complex. In the same solvent system, the parent 33,83,122,133,182‐penta‐O‐methyl‐F430 ( 2 ) is four coordinate and diamagnetic even in the presence of equimolar 1H‐imidazole. Protonation of the axially coordinating histidine residue of 13 gave the diamagnetic tetracoordinate base‐off form, which allowed us to establish the constitution of 13 by NMR.  相似文献   

7.
Mechanistic questions regarding the reductive cleavage of sulfonium ions by the NiI form of coenzyme F430 pentamethyl ester (F430M) were addressed in a series of kinetic studies and isotope labeling experiments. In neat DMF, methane formation from dialkyl(methyl)sulfonium ions consistently showed a delay time of ca. 1 h. In the presence of excess propanethiol, no delay was observed and methane formation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics with a logarithmic dependence of the initial rate on the concentration of propanethiol. From the temperature dependence of the reaction rate, an estimate for the activation parameters of ΔH# = 49 kJ mol?1 and (apparent) ΔS# = –114 J K?1 mol?1 was derived. The observation of deuterium incorporation into methane from (CH3)2CHOD, but not from (CH3)2CDOH, indicates that the fourth H-entity is introduced into CH4 as a proton, and that free CH3 radicals are not involved. In contrast to the reaction with the homogeneous one-electron reductant sodium naphthalide, the F430M-catalyzed reduction of mixed dialkyl(methyl)sulfonium ions showed a pronounced selectivity for the cleavage of Me? S over that of alkyl-S (alkyl ≠ Me) bonds. Mechanisms that are consistent with these results, as well as possible explanations for the time delay and the apparent highly negative entropy of activation, are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
A methylnickel(II) derivative of coenzyme F430 ( 1 ) was proposed as an intermediate in the enzymic process catalyzed by methyl-CoM reductasc. Indirect evidence points to formation of CH3–F430MII in the reaction of F30M1 (obtained from F430MII ( 2 )) with eleclrophilic methyl donors. The results presented here show, that such a compound does exist. A paramagnetic CD3–NiII derivative 5b of the pentamethyl ester 2 (F430M) of coenzyme F430 was prepared by in situ methylation with (CD3)2Mg and characterized by its isotropically shifted 2H-NMR spectrum. At ?40°, the very broad D-signal of the axially coordinated CD3 group is found at ?490 ppm. Comparison with the 2H- and 1H-NMR spectra of mcthyl(tetramethylcyclam)nickel(II) derivatives 4 ([NiII(CH3))(tmc)]CF3SO3 ( 4a ) is the only isolated CH3–Ni derivative of a N4macrocyclic NiII complex' shows that the large isotropic shift to high field is characteristic for a Me group axially bound to the Ni center. The temperature dependence of the isotropic shift of the CD3–Ni group in both 4b and 5b follows Curie's law and yields 2H hyperfine coupling constants of ?0.65 ( 4b ) and ?0.85 MHz ( 5b ), respectively. The 1H-NMR spectrum indicates that, in contrast to the five-coordinate monochloro complex [NiIICl(tmc)]+, intermolecular exchange of the axial ligand in [NiII(CH3)(tmc)]+ 4a is either slow at the NMR time scale or does not occur at all.  相似文献   

9.
Factor F430 from Methanogenic Bacteria: Structure of the Protein-free Factor Factor F430, the porphinoid nickel-containing coenzyme of the methylcoenzyme-M reductase of metanogenic bacteria is shown to be the 33,83,122,133,182-pentaacid derivative of the pentamethylester F430M, the structure of which had been determined previously (see structural formulae 1 and 2 ). The structure assignment rests on chromatographic, UV/VIS-, CD-, IR-, and 13C-NMR-spectroscopic as well as FAB-mass spectral comparision of F430 with F430M and the pentaacid prepared by acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of F430M. In the cells of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, factor F430 is present in a ‘bound’ and also, depending on the growth conditions, in ‘free’ form, the latter being defined as the part of total F430 that can be extracted from the cells under extremely mild conditions (80% EtOH at 0–4°). From the (protein)-‘bound’ form, F430 is extracted by subsequently treating the cells at 0–4° with 80% EtOH containing (e.g.), 2m LiCi. From both sources, the extracted factor is the same pentaacid, and there is no indication for the existence of a protein-free F430 species that would contain additional (covalently bound) structural elements.  相似文献   

10.
The class II chelatase CfbA catalyzes Ni2+ insertion into sirohydrochlorin (SHC) to yield the product nickel-sirohydrochlorin (Ni-SHC) during coenzyme F430 biosynthesis. CfbA is an important ancestor of all the class II chelatase family of enzymes, including SirB and CbiK/CbiX, functioning not only as a nickel-chelatase, but also as a cobalt-chelatase in vitro. Thus, CfbA is a key enzyme in terms of diversity and evolution of the chelatases catalyzing formation of metal-SHC-type of cofactors. However, the reaction mechanism of CfbA with Ni2+ and Co2+ remains elusive. To understand the structural basis of the underlying mechanisms and evolutionary aspects of the class II chelatases, X-ray crystal structures of Methanocaldococcus jannaschii wild-type CfbA with various ligands, including SHC, Ni2+, Ni-SHC, and Co2+ were determined. Further, X-ray crystallographic snapshot analysis captured a unique Ni2+-SHC-His intermediate complex and Co-SHC-bound CfbA, which resulted from a more rapid chelatase reaction for Co2+ than Ni2+. Meanwhile, an in vitro activity assay confirmed the different reaction rates for Ni2+ and Co2+ by CfbA. Based on these structural and functional analyses, the following substrate-SHC-assisted Ni2+ insertion catalytic mechanism was proposed: Ni2+ insertion to SHC is promoted by the support of an acetate side chain of SHC.

The substrate-assisted nickel chelatase mechanism of CfbA in coenzyme F430 biosynthesis was unveiled by X-ray crystal structure analysis.  相似文献   

11.
Todd LN  Zimmer M 《Inorganic chemistry》2002,41(25):6831-6837
Normal-coordinate structural decomposition, cluster analysis, and molecular mechanics calculations were undertaken to examine the effect of methyl-coenzyme-M reductase (MCR) on the nonplanar deformations of coenzyme F430. Although free 12,13-diepi-F430 has a lower energy conformation than free F430, the protein restraints exerted by MCR are responsible for F430 having a lower energy conformation than the 12,13-diepimer in MCR. According to the NSD analysis, the crystal structure of free diepimerized F430M is highly distorted. In MCR the protein prevents 12,13-diepi-F430 from undergoing nonplanar deformations; therefore, MCR favors F430 over the 12,13-diepimeric form. The strain imposed on 12,13-diepi-F430 in the protein is so large that although 88% of free F430 is found in the diepimeric form, none of the diepimeric form is found in MCR. This is of significance since the two forms have different chemistries. MCR also moderates the nonplanar deformations of coenzyme F430, which are known to affect redox potentials and axial ligand affinities in tetrapyrroles, suggesting that the protein environment (MCR) is responsible for tuning the chemistry of the active site nickel ion. F430 is bound to MCR by hydrogen bonds between the protein and the F430 carboxylate groups. Conformational searches have shown that F430 has very little rotational and translational freedom within MCR.  相似文献   

12.
Methyl-coenzyme-M reductase (MCR) is a key enzyme common to all methane-producing pathogens. It catalyses the final step in methane synthesis. Each MCR contains two noncovalently bound molecules of cofactor F430. Normal-coordinate structural decomposition, hole-size analysis, and molecular mechanics calculations were undertaken to examine the effect of MCR on the hole-size and nonplanar deformations of coenzyme F430. In MCR, the protein prevents F430 from undergoing nonplanar deformations, which results in a more rigid tetrahydrocorphinoid cofactor that has a shorter ideal metal-nitrogen distance in the MCR protein matrix than it does in solution. Changing the coordination number of the nickel ion in F430 has a very small effect on the ideal hole size; however, it has a significant effect on the nonplanar deformations the coenzyme undergoes upon contraction and expansion. In all complexes we examined, cofactor F430 undergoes more nonplanar deformations when it contains a four-coordinate metal ion than it does when it contains a six-coordinate metal ion. Clearly, MCR moderates the hole-size and the nonplanar deformations of coenzyme F430, which are known to affect redox potentials and axial ligand affinities. This suggests that the protein environment may be responsible for tuning the chemistry of the active-site nickel ion.  相似文献   

13.
Methanogenesis, the anaerobic production of methane from CO2 or simple carbon compounds, requires seven organic coenzymes. This review describes pathways for the biosynthesis of methanofuran, 5,6,7,8-tetrahydromethanopterin, coenzyme F420, coenzyme M (2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid) and coenzyme B (7-mercaptoheptanoyl-L-threonine phosphate). Spectroscopic evidence for the pathways is reviewed and recent efforts are described to identify and characterize the biosynthetic enzymes from methanogenic archaea. The literature from 1971 to September 2001 is reviewed, and 169 references are cited.  相似文献   

14.
An LC-ESI-MS method was developed for the identification and quantification of fructose-1,6-biphosphate (F1,6BP) and fructose-6-phosphate (F6P), respectively the substrate and the product of the enzymatic reaction catalysed by fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (F1,6BPase). F1,6BPase, expressed predominantly in liver and kidney, is one of the rate-limiting enzymes of hepatic gluconeogenesis and has become a target for the development of new drugs for type 2 diabetes. The two sugar phosphates were separated on a Phenomenex Luna NH2 column (150 mm x 2.0 mm id) using the following mobile phase: 5 mM triethylamine acetate buffer/ACN (80:20) v/v in a linear pH gradient (from pH = 9 to 10 in 15 min) at the flow rate of 0.3 mL/min. The detection was performed with an IT mass spectrometer in negative polarity (full scan 100-450 m/z) and in SIM mode on the generated anions at m/z = 339 (F1,6BP) and m/z = 259 (F6P). Under the optimised final conditions, the method was validated for accuracy, specificity, precision (inter- and intradays RSD comprised between 1.0 and 6.3% over the range of concentrations used), linearity (50-400 microM), LODs (0.44 microM) and LOQs (1.47 microM), and the method was applied to F6P determination in the F1,6BPase catalysed hydrolysis of F1,6BP.  相似文献   

15.
In the further development and understanding of heme-copper O2-reduction chemistry inspired by the active-site chemistry in cytochrome c oxidase, we describe a dioxygen adduct, [(F8TPP)FeIII-(O22-)-CuII(TMPA)](ClO4) (3), formed by addition of O2 to a 1:1 mixture of the porphyrinate-iron(II) complex (F8TPP)FeII (1a) {F8TPP = tetrakis(2,6-difluorophenyl)porphyrinate dianion} and the copper(I) complex [(TMPA)CuI(MeCN)](ClO4) (1b) {TMPA = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine}. Complex 3 forms in preference to heme-only or copper-only binuclear products, is remarkably stable {t1/2 (RT; MeCN) approximately 20 min; lambda max = 412 (Soret), 558 nm; EPR silent}, and is formulated as a peroxo complex on the basis of manometry {1a/1b/O2 = 1:1:1}, MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry {16O2, m/z 1239 [(3 + MeCN)+]; 18O2, m/z 1243}, and resonance Raman spectroscopy {nu(O-O) = 808 cm-1; Delta16O2/18O2 = 46 cm-1; Delta16O2/16/18O2 = 23 cm-1}. Consistent with a mu-eta2:eta1 bridging peroxide ligand, two metal-O stretching frequencies are observed {nu(Fe-O) = 533 cm-1, nu(Fe-O-Cu) = 511 cm-1}, and supporting normal coordinate analysis is presented. 2H and 19F NMR spectroscopies reveal that 3 is high-spin {also muB = 5.1 +/- 0.2, Evans method} with downfield-shifted pyrrole and upfield-shifted TMPA resonances, similar to the pattern observed for the structurally characterized mu-oxo complex [(F8TPP)FeIII-O-CuII(TMPA)]+ (4) (known S = 2 system, antiferromagnetically coupled high-spin FeIII and CuII). M?ssbauer spectroscopy exhibits a sharp quadrupole doublet (zero field; delta = 0.57 mm/s, |DeltaEQ| = 1.14 mm/s) for 3, with isomer shift and magnetic field dependence data indicative of a peroxide ligand and S = 2 formulation. Both UV-visible-monitored stopped-flow kinetics and M?ssbauer spectroscopic studies reveal the formation of heme-only superoxide complex (S)(F8TPP)FeIII-(O2-) (2a) (S = solvent molecule) prior to 3. Thermal decomposition of mu-peroxo complex 3 yields mu-oxo complex 4 with concomitant release of approximately 0.5 mol O2 per mol 3. Characterization of the reaction 1a/1b + O2 --> 2 --> 3 --> 4, presented here, advances our understanding and provides new insights to heme/Cu dioxygen-binding and reduction.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Mass spectrometry-based methods have been employed in order to study the reactions of non- (h(6)/h(6)), half (d(6)/h(6)), and fully (d(6)/d(6)) deuterium labeled protonated dimers of acetone in the gas phase. Neither kinetic nor thermodynamic isotope effects were found. From MIKES experiments (both spontaneous and collision-induced dissociations), it was found that the relative ion yield (m/z 65 vs m/z 59) from the dissociation reaction of half deuterium labeled (d(6)/h(6)) protonated dimer of acetone is dependent on the internal energy. A relative ion yield (m/z 65 vs m/z 59) close to unity is observed for cold, nonactivated, metastable ions, whereas the ion yield is observed to increase (favoring m/z 65) when the pressure of the collision gas is increased. This is in striking contrast to what would be expected if a kinetic isotope effect were present. A combined study of the kinetics and the thermodynamics of the association reaction between acetone and protonated acetone implicates the presence of at least two isomeric adducts. We have employed G3(MP2) theory to map the potential energy surface leading from the reactants, acetone and protonated acetone, to the various isomeric adducts. The proton-bound dimer of acetone was found to be the lowest-energy isomer, and protonated diacetone alcohol the next lowest-energy isomer. Protonated diacetone alcohol, even though it is an isomer hidden behind many barriers, can possibly account for the observed relative ion yield and its dependence on the mode of activation.  相似文献   

18.
The photoionization and photodissociation of L-valine are studied by tunable synchrotron vacuum ultraviolet photoionization mass spectrometry at the photon energy of 13 eV. The ionization energy of L-valine and the appearance energies of major fragments are measured by the photoionization efficiency spectrum in the photon energy range of 8-11 eV. Possible formation pathways of the major fragments, NH(2)CHC(OH)(2)(+) (m/z=75), NH(2)(CH(3))(2)(CH)(2)(+) (m/z=72) and NH(2)CHCO(+) (m/z=57), are discussed in detail with the theoretical calculations at the B3LYP/6-31++G (d, p) level. Hydrogen migration is considered as the key way for the formation of NH(2)CHC(OH)(2)(+) (m/z=75) and NH(2)CHCO(+) (m/z=57). Furthermore, other fragments, NH(2)CHCOOH(+) (m/z=74), (CH(3))(2)(CH)(2)(+) (m/z=56), C(4)H(7)(+) (m/z=55), NH(2)CHOH(+) (m/z=46), NH(2)CH(2)(+) (m/z=30) and m/z=18, species are also briefly described.  相似文献   

19.
The fragmentation of bisphenol A diglycidyl ether (BADGE), bisphenol F diglycidyl ether (BFDGE) and their derivatives was studied by electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry. Multiple-stage mass spectrometry and accurate mass measurements were combined to establish the fragmentation pathways. BADGEs and BFDGEs tend to form ammonium adducts under electrospray conditions which fragmented easily. The fragmentation of [M+NH(4)](+) for BADGEs started with the cleavage of the phenyl-alkyl bond, which was followed by the α-cleavage of the ether group to generate the characteristic product ions at m/z 135, [C(9)H(11)O](+), and m/z 107, [C(7)H(7)O](+). The fragmentation of the BFDGE isomer mixtures was studied by on-line reversed-phase liquid chromatography coupled to multiple-stage mass spectrometry (LC/MS(n)). Information obtained from product ion spectra for each BFDGE isomer and its comparison with the fragmentation pathway of BADGE allowed each isomer and the chromatographic elution order to be identified.  相似文献   

20.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the reaction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH3-SCoM) and coenzyme B (HS-CoB) to methane and the corresponding heterodisulfide CoM-S-S-CoB. This unique reaction proceeds under strictly anaerobic conditions in the presence of coenzyme F430, a Ni-porphinoid. MCR is a large (alphabetagamma)2 heterohexameric protein complex containing two 50 A long active sites channels. Coenzyme F430 is embedded at the channel bottom and the substrates CH3-SCoM and HS-CoB bind in front of F430 into a solvent free and hydrophobic channel segment. Two principally different catalytic mechanisms are currently discussed. Mechanism I is based on a nucleophilic attack of Ni(I) onto the methyl group of CH3-SCoM yielding methyl-Ni(III) and mechanism II on an attack of Ni(I) onto the thioether sulfur of CH3-SCoM generating a Ni(II)-SCoM intermediate. Both mechanisms are discussed in the light of a large number of data collected about MCR over the last twenty years.  相似文献   

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