Publication | Closed Access
Dioxygen Binds End-On to Mononuclear Copper in a Precatalytic Enzyme Complex
410
Citations
33
References
2004
Year
BiochemistryCopper Active SitesNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisMetalloproteinMolecular BiologyMononuclear CopperBioorganometallic ChemistryCopper-dioxygen ComplexDopamine Beta-monooxygenaseCatalysisStructure-function Enzyme KineticsRedox ChemistryPrecatalytic Enzyme ComplexMedicineRedox BiologyStructural BiologyDioxygen Binds End-on
Copper active sites play a major role in enzymatic activation of dioxygen. We trapped the copper-dioxygen complex in the enzyme peptidylglycine-alphahydroxylating monooxygenase (PHM) by freezing protein crystals that had been soaked with a slow substrate and ascorbate in the presence of oxygen. The x-ray crystal structure of this precatalytic complex, determined to 1.85-angstrom resolution, shows that oxygen binds to one of the coppers in the enzyme with an end-on geometry. Given this structure, it is likely that dioxygen is directly involved in the electron transfer and hydrogen abstraction steps of the PHM reaction. These insights may apply to other copper oxygen-activating enzymes, such as dopamine beta-monooxygenase, and to the design of biomimetic complexes.
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