Login / Signup

Peroxide Activation Regulated by Hydrogen Bonds within Artificial Cu Proteins.

Samuel I MannTillmann HeinischThomas R WardAndrew S Borovik
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
Copper-hydroperoxido species (CuII-OOH) have been proposed to be key intermediates in biological and synthetic oxidations. Using biotin-streptavidin (Sav) technology, artificial copper proteins have been developed to stabilize a CuII-OOH complex in solution and in crystallo. Stability is achieved because the Sav host provides a local environment around the Cu-OOH that includes a network of hydrogen bonds to the hydroperoxido ligand. Systematic deletions of individual hydrogen bonds to the Cu-OOH complex were accomplished using different Sav variants and demonstrated that stability is achieved with a single hydrogen bond to the proximal O-atom of the hydroperoxido ligand: changing this interaction to only include the distal O-atom produced a reactive variant that oxidized an external substrate.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • visible light
  • minimally invasive
  • metal organic framework
  • transition metal
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • low density lipoprotein
  • solid state