D-Amino acid oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of D-amino acids to imino acids with subsequent transfer of the electrons to molecular oxygen. Proposed mechanisms for the mode of cleavage of the substrate CH bond include stepwise formation of a carbanion, followed by attack of the carbanion on the enzyme-bound FAD, direct hydride transfer of the substrate alpha-hydrogen to the FAD, and transfer of a hydride from the substrate amino group to the FAD. Conditions have previously been established under which large, limiting, primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects can be measured with D-alanine, D-serine, and glycine as substrates for D-amino acid oxidase [Denu, J. M., & Fitzpatrick, P. F. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 8207-8215]. To determine whether these values are the intrinsic isotope effects, primary tritium kinetic isotope effects have been determined with these three substrates. The values are 12.6, 8.6, and 6.4, respectively. These values are consistent with expression of the intrinsic isotope effects under these conditions, allowing for determination of the values of the intrinsic deuterium effects as 5.7, 4.5, and 3.6 for D-alanine, D-serine, and glycine, respectively. Under these conditions, the alpha-secondary tritium kinetic isotope effect with glycine, the beta-secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effect with D-alanine, and the solvent kinetic isotope effect with D-serine are all indistinguishable from unity. These results are not consistent with concerted mechanisms for CH bond cleavage with this enzyme, but are fully consistent with the involvement of a carbanion intermediate.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi00179a029 | DOI Listing |
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom
January 2025
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, United States.
An inherent strength of hydrogen/deuterium exchange coupled to mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) is its ability to detect the presence of multiple conformational states of a protein, which often manifest as multimodal isotopic envelopes. However, the statistical considerations for accurate analysis of multimodal spectra have yet to be established. Here we outline an unrestrained binomial distribution fitting approach with the corresponding statistical tests to accurately detect and, when possible, deconvolute isotopic distributions that contain multiple subpopulations.
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January 2025
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Bhopal Department of Chemistry, Chemistry, Room No. 226, Academic Block - 2, Indore By-pass Road, Bhauri, 462066, Bhopal, INDIA.
Unraveling the electronic structure of metal complexes can bring various catalytic possibilities for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, the electronic effect of metal and ligands modulating and switching the reaction center for HER has yet to be comprehensively analyzed. Herein, we report nickel selenoether electrocatalysts which show tunable reaction centers (nickel or ligand) for HER using mild weak acetic acid in less deprotonating DMF solvent.
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October 2024
Center for Heterocyclic Compounds, Department of Chemistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, United States.
A class of generated Lewis acid (LA) activated acridine complexes is reported, which act as potent photochemical catalysts for the oxidation of a variety of protected secondary amines. Acridine/LA complexes exhibit tunable excited state reduction potentials ranging from +2.07 to 2.
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January 2025
University of Oxford, Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND.
Combining experiment and theory, the mechanisms of H2 activation by the potassium-bridged aluminyl dimer K2[Al(NON)]2 (NON = 4,5-bis(2,6-diisopropylanilido)-2,7-di-tertbutyl-9,9-dimethylxanthene) and its monomeric K+-sequestered counterpart have been investigated. These systems show diverging reactivity towards the activation of dihydrogen, with the dimeric species undergoing formal oxidative addition of H2 at each Al centre under ambient conditions, and the monomer proving to be inert to dihydrogen addition. Noting that this K+ dependence is inconsistent with classical models of single-centre reactivity for carbene-like Al(I) species, we rationalize these observations instead by a cooperative frustrated Lewis pair (FLP)-type mechanism (for the dimer) in which the aluminium centre acts as the Lewis base and the K+ centres as Lewis acids.
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January 2025
Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, Hauz Khas, New Delhi, Delhi, 110016, India.
Crystalline γ-FeO(OH) dominantly possessing ─OH terminals (𝛾-FeO(OH)), polycrystalline γ-FeO(OH) containing multiple ─O, ─OH, and Fe terminals (𝛾-FeO(OH)), and α-FeO majorly containing ─O surface terminals are used as electrocatalysts to study the effect of surface terminals on electrocatalytic nitrate reduction reaction (eNORR) selectivity and stabilization of reaction intermediates. Brunauer-Emmett-Teller analysis and electrochemically determined surface area suggest a high active surface area of 117.79 m g (ECSA: 0.
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