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Amino-Ligand-Coordinated Dicopper Active Sites Enable Catechol Oxidase-Like Activity for Chiral Recognition and Catalysis.

Meng ShaLi RaoWeiqing XuYing QinRina SuYu WuQie FangHengjia WangXiaowen CuiLirong ZhengWenling GuChengzhou Zhu
Published in: Nano letters (2023)
Developing highly active and selective advanced nanozymes for enzyme-mimicking catalysis remains a long-standing challenge for basic research and practical applications. Herein, we grafted a chiral histidine- (His-) coordinated copper core onto Zr-based metal-organic framework (MOF) basic backbones to structurally mirror the bimetal active site of natural catechol oxidase. Such a biomimetic fabricated process affords MOF-His-Cu with catechol oxidase-like activity, which can catalyze dehydrogenation and oxidation of o -diphenols and then transfer electrons to O 2 to generate H 2 O 2 by the cyclic conversion of Cu(II) and Cu(I). Specifically, the elaborate incorporation of chiral His arms results in higher catalytic selectivity over the chiral catechol substrates than natural enzyme. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the binding energy and potential steric effect in active site-substrate interactions account for the high stereoselectivity. This work demonstrates efficient and selective enzyme-mimicking catalytic processes and deepens the understanding of the catalytic mechanism of nanozymes.
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