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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Reactivity-Activation of O(2) or NO in Copper and Heme-Cu Coordination Complexes

$6.07M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES
Recipient Organization Johns Hopkins University
Country United States
Start Date Feb 01, 2021
End Date Jan 31, 2026
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10551343
Grant Description

Project Summary Proposed investigations derive from two on-going R01 GM research programs. The study objectives include the design, synthesis & investigation of synthetic models which will aid the elucidation of fundamental aspects of structure, M-ligation, spectroscopy and reactivity relevant to copper and heme/M

(M = Cu, Fe) processing of molecular oxygen (O2(g)) and nitric oxide (NO(g)). Copper proteins of concern include lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs), particulate methane monooxygenases (pMMOs), the enzyme family which includes dopamine beta-monooxygenase (DBM) and peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM), and a coupled binuclear copper protein, NspF. Recent biochemical research

has raised questions concerning the nature of their active sites and the mechanism(s) of action involving O2(g) activation and C-H hydroxylation. LPMOs may be peroxygenases (H2O2 co-substrate), new pMMO studies suggest a mono-Cu active site, and it is now questioned as to whether DBM and PHM activate

O2 with a Cu versus a Cu2 center process. Relevant to these issues, there are clear needs to synthesize and characterize the thus-far elusive copper(II)-oxyl (CuII-O·) species; it has the oxidizing ability needed for the difficult LPMO or pMMO substrates. We also plan to elucidate fundamentals critical to the O-O

reductive cleavage process occurring in all monooxygenases (& oxidases). Also, we will generate and characterize the structures, physical properties and reactivity of new high-valent binuclear Cu(II)-O-Cu(III) or related complexes. Otherwise, proposed research will focus on the heme-copper active site present

in cytochrome c oxidases, where O2-binds and is reductively cleaved to give two mole-equiv water. The study of synthetic models can help elucidate details and aid an understanding of structure, O2-binding, proton or H-bonding facilitated O-O cleavage, and the role of the active-site phenol (in the His-Tyr

cofactor) as a proton-electron donor. Investigations are proposed to further investigate the mechanisms of O-O cleavage in heme-peroxo-copper constructs, where the porphyrinate, the Fe axial ligand and especially the ligand for copper ion, are systematically varied. A variety of approaches are planned,

including study of new chelates for copper which possess three N-donors and an appended phenol. NO(g) synthetic model chemistry sub-projects with copper and heme-M will also be carried out. With copper complexes, the focus will be on NO(g) reductive coupling, and investigation of mechanisms pertaining to

the NO(g) binding to metal ion(s), formation of the N–N bond giving putative hyponitrite N2O22– intermediates, and proton and/or H-bonding contributions to N–O cleavage and formation of N2O. Heme/Fe (or Cu) mediated NO(g) reductive coupling is critical in NO-Reductases and chemistry and synthetic models for this process will be investigated. Metal-peroxynitrite (PN, from metal ion + O2(g) +

NO(g)) reactivity, especially toward CO2, will also be studied in relation to the relevant biological activity.

All Grantees

Johns Hopkins University

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