Seminars

DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY, SEOUL NATIONAL UNIVERSITY.

Mechanistic Studies of an Unusual C–O Bond Formation in Fosfomycin Biosynthesis

February 14, 2014l Hit 516
Date : April 24, 2014 16:30 ~
Speaker : Prof. Hung-Wen Liu (The University of Texas)
Location : Rm.103, Bldg.25-1
Date : 2014. 4. 24, 4:30 PM Place : Int"l conf. room, Bldg.25-1 -Abstract- The O2-activating, non-heme iron enzymes catalyze a wide range of oxidation reactions with important biological implications, such as DNA repair, hypoxic response, collagen biosynthesis, and histone demethylation. Most of these enzymes possess a single iron center coordinated by two His and one Asp/Glu residues in a tridentate binding motif referred to as the "2-His-1-carboxylate facial triad". Understanding the mechanism of O2-activation by these enzymes may provide key insights into the source of their diverse substrate specificities despite similarly coordinated active site metal centers. HppE is a unique member of this class of enzymes and functions as an iron-dependent epoxidase to convert (S)-2-hydroxypropyl-1-phosphonate (S-HPP) to the antibiotic fosfomycin. The reaction catalyzed by HppE is unusual, because it involves the 1,3-dehydrogenation of a secondary alcohol to an epoxide. Several mechanisms have been proposed for HppE catalysis, and these are differentiated primarily in terms of the identity of the O2-activated iron complex that abstracts a hydrogen atom from C1 of S-HPP to initiate epoxide ring closure. Our recent results have shown that the preferred cosubstrate is H2O2 and that HppE uses an iron(IV)-oxo complex as the hydrogen atom abstractor. These results along with recent studies using radical probes to gain insight into the mechanism of this enzyme will be presented.