How Many O-Donor Groups in Enterobactin Does It Take to Bind a Metal Cation?

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The E. coli siderophore enterobactin, the strongest Fe-III chelator known to date, forms hexacoordinate complexes with Si-IV, Ge-IV, and Ti-IV. Synthetic protocols have been developed to prepare non-symmetric enterobactin analogues with varying denticities. Various benzoic acid residues were coupled to the macrocyclic lactone to afford a diverse library of ligands. These enterobactin analogues were bound to Si-IV, Ge-IV, and Ti-IV, and the complexes were investigated through experimental and computational techniques. The binding behavior of the synthesized chelators enabled assessment of the contribution of each of the phenolic hydroxy groups in enterobactin to metal-ion complexation. It was found that at least four O-donors are needed for enterobactin derivatives to act as metal binders. Density functional theory calculations indicate that the strong binding behavior of enterobactin can be ascribed to a diminished translational entropy penalty, a common feature of the chelate effect, coupled with the structural arrangement of the three catechol moieties, which allows the triseryl base to be installed without distorting the preferred local metal-binding geometry of the catecholate ligands.
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Issue Date
2019-05
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, v.25, no.28, pp.6955 - 6962

ISSN
0947-6539
DOI
10.1002/chem.201900453
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/263146
Appears in Collection
CH-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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