AI Article Synopsis

  • Enzymes with dimetal-carboxylate cofactors, including the newly discovered MnFe variant, play a key role in challenging chemical reactions like methane activation.
  • Recent studies on the ligand-binding oxidase from Geobacillus kaustophilus revealed differences between the FeFe and MnFe cofactors through advanced spectroscopic methods and molecular calculations.
  • The findings about the electronic and dynamic properties of these cofactors suggest that the MnFe complex has a more favorable redox potential and proton affinity, impacting how these enzymes function in reactions.

Article Abstract

Enzymes with a dimetal-carboxylate cofactor catalyze reactions among the top challenges in chemistry such as methane and dioxygen (O) activation. Recently described proteins bind a manganese-iron cofactor (MnFe) instead of the classical diiron cofactor (FeFe). Determination of atomic-level differences of homo- versus hetero-bimetallic cofactors is crucial to understand their diverse redox reactions. We studied a ligand-binding oxidase from the bacterium Geobacillus kaustophilus (R2lox) loaded with a FeFe or MnFe cofactor, which catalyzes O reduction and an unusual tyrosine-valine ether cross-link formation, as revealed by X-ray crystallography. Advanced X-ray absorption, emission, and vibrational spectroscopy methods and quantum chemical and molecular mechanics calculations provided relative Mn/Fe contents, X-ray photoreduction kinetics, metal-ligand bond lengths, metal-metal distances, metal oxidation states, spin configurations, valence-level degeneracy, molecular orbital composition, nuclear quadrupole splitting energies, and vibrational normal modes for both cofactors. A protonation state with an axial water (HO) ligand at Mn or Fe in binding site 1 and a metal-bridging hydroxo group (μOH) in a hydrogen-bonded network is assigned. Our comprehensive picture of the molecular, electronic, and dynamic properties of the cofactors highlights reorientation of the unique axis along the Mn-OH bond for the Mn1(III) Jahn-Teller ion but along the Fe-μOH bond for the octahedral Fe1(III). This likely corresponds to a more positive redox potential of the Mn(III)Fe(III) cofactor and higher proton affinity of its μOH group. Refined model structures for the Mn(III)Fe(III) and Fe(III)Fe(III) cofactors are presented. Implications of our findings for the site-specific metalation of R2lox and performance of the O reduction and cross-link formation reactions are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.6b01752DOI Listing

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