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Thymidylate synthase (TSase) produces the sole intracellular de novo source of thymidine (i.e., the DNA base T) and thus is a common target for antibiotic and anticancer drugs. Mg(2+) has been reported to affect TSase activity, but the mechanism of this interaction has not been investigated. Here we show that Mg(2+) binds to the surface of Escherichia coli TSase and affects the kinetics of hydride transfer at the interior active site (16 Å away). Examination of the crystal structures identifies a Mg(2+) near the glutamyl moiety of the folate cofactor, providing the first structural evidence for Mg(2+) binding to TSase. The kinetics and NMR relaxation experiments suggest that the weak binding of Mg(2+) to the protein surface stabilizes the closed conformation of the ternary enzyme complex and reduces the entropy of activation on the hydride transfer step. Mg(2+) accelerates the hydride transfer by ~7-fold but does not affect the magnitude or temperature dependence of the intrinsic kinetic isotope effect. These results suggest that Mg(2+) facilitates the protein motions that bring the hydride donor and acceptor together, but it does not change the tunneling ready state of the hydride transfer. These findings highlight how variations in cellular Mg(2+) concentration can modulate enzyme activity through long-range interactions in the protein, rather than binding at the active site. The interaction of Mg(2+) with the glutamyl tail of the folate cofactor and nonconserved residues of bacterial TSase may assist in designing antifolates with polyglutamyl substitutes as species-specific antibiotic drugs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja400761x | DOI Listing |
Biochemistry
September 2025
Loyola University Chicago, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, 1068 W Sheridan Rd, Chicago, Illinois 60660, United States.
Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase 1B (DHOD1B) is one of several flavoproteins that utilize active half-sites. These enzymes have two flavin cofactors (FAD and FMN) that each interact with a specific reductant/oxidant substrate/product. Electrons gained at one-half-site must be transmitted to the other half-site and iron-sulfur centers between the flavin cofactors serve in this role.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
September 2025
University of Göttingen, Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, Tammannstraße 4, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany.
Nitrogenase accumulates reducing equivalents in hydrides and couples H elimination to the reductive binding of N at a di-iron edge of its FeMo cofactor (FeMoco). Here, we describe that oxidation of a pyrazolato-based dinickel(II) dihydride complex K[L(Ni-H)] (), either electrochemically or chemically using H or ferrocenium, triggers H elimination and binding of N in a constrained and extremely bent bridging mode in [LNi(μ-N)] (). Spectroscopic and computational evidence indicate that the electronic structure of is best described as Ni-(N)-Ni, with a rare 1e reduced and significantly activated N substrate ( = 1894 cm).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrg Biomol Chem
September 2025
Laboratoire d'Innovation Moléculaire et Applications (LIMA), Univ. de Strasbourg, Univ. de Haute-Alsace, CNRS (UMR 7042), Equipe de Synthèse Organique et Molécules Bioactives (SYBIO), ECPM, 25 Rue Becquerel, 67000 Strasbourg, France.
,-glycosides--glycosides characterized by two carbon substituents at the pseudo-anomeric position-constitute a structurally distinctive class of glycomimetics with growing relevance in natural products and drug discovery. These motifs appear in diverse bioactive compounds such as maitotoxin, nogalamycins, zaragozic acids and remdesivir, displaying antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and anticancer properties. The unique architectures of ,-glycosides expand the glycochemical space and hold promise for therapeutic development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrg Biomol Chem
September 2025
School of Chemistry and Material Engineering, Anhui Provincial Key Laboratory of Green Carbon Chemistry, Engineering Research Center of Biomass Conversion and Pollution Prevention of Anhui Educational Institutions, Biomass-derived Functional Oligosaccharides Engineering Technology Research Center of
A solvent- and catalyst-free protocol for the selective reductive deoxygenation of α,β-unsaturated ketones with pinacolborane (HBpin) has been developed. -OH/NH groups efficiently direct the transformation, affording 2-allylphenols and 2-allylanilines under mild conditions with excellent chemo- and regioselectivity. Mechanistic studies indicate a boron-assisted hydride transfer and carbocation pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Sci
August 2025
Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz 1 45470 Mülheim an der Ruhr Germany
What governs the relationship between the reaction rate and thermodynamic driving force? Despite decades of rate theory, no general physically grounded equation exists to relate rate and driving force across all regimes. Classical models, such as the Marcus equation and Leffler equations, either rely on under-realistic assumptions or only capture the local behaviour, failing outside narrow regimes. We derive a general, non-linear equation from microscopic reversibility, arriving at three physically meaningful parameters: a minimum preorganisational barrier ( ), a reaction symmetry offset ( ), and a kinetic curvature factor ().
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