A Divalent Metal Cation-Metabolite Interaction Model Reveals Cation Buffering and Speciation.

Biochemistry

Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United States.

Published: July 2024

I present the perspective that the divalent metalome and the metabolome can be modeled as a network of chelating interactions instead of separate entities. I review progress in understanding the complex cellular environment, in particular recent contributions to modeling metabolite-Mg interactions. I then demonstrate a simple extension of these strategies based approximately on intracellular concentrations. This model is composed of four divalent metal cations with a range of cellular concentrations and physical properties (Mg, Ca, Mn, and Zn), eight representative metabolites, and interaction constants. I applied this model to predict the speciation of divalent metal cations between free and metabolite-chelated species. This approach reveals potentially beneficial properties, including maintenance of free divalent metal cations at biologically relevant concentrations, buffering of free divalent metal cations, and enrichment of functional metabolite-chelated species. While currently limited by available interaction coefficients, this modeling strategy can be generalized to more complex systems. In summary, biochemists should consider the potential of cellular metabolites to form chelating interactions with divalent metal cations.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.4c00125DOI Listing

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