Login / Signup

Facile and dynamic cleavage of every iron-sulfide bond in cuboidal iron-sulfur clusters.

Niklas B ThompsonGil NamkoongBrighton A SkeelDaniel L M Suess
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Nature employs weak-field metalloclusters to support a wide range of biological processes. The most ubiquitous metalloclusters are the cuboidal Fe-S clusters, which are comprised of Fe sites with locally high-spin electronic configurations. Such configurations enhance rates of ligand exchange and imbue the clusters with a degree of structural plasticity that is increasingly thought to be functionally relevant. Here, we examine this phenomenon using isotope tracing experiments. Specifically, we demonstrate that synthetic [Fe 4 S 4 ] and [MoFe 3 S 4 ] clusters exchange their Fe atoms with Fe 2+ ions dissolved in solution, a process that involves the reversible cleavage and reformation of every Fe-S bond in the cluster core. This exchange is facile-in most cases occurring at room temperature on the timescale of minutes-and documented over a range of cluster core oxidation states and terminal ligation patterns. In addition to suggesting a highly dynamic picture of cluster structure, these results provide a method for isotopically labeling pre-formed clusters with spin-active nuclei, such as 57 Fe. Such a protocol is demonstrated for the radical S -adenosyl-l-methionine enzyme, RlmN.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • metal organic framework
  • visible light
  • aqueous solution
  • quantum dots
  • high resolution
  • dna binding
  • density functional theory
  • mass spectrometry
  • gold nanoparticles
  • highly efficient