3a91 Citations

Elucidation of metal-ion accumulation induced by hydrogen bonds on protein surfaces by using porous lysozyme crystals containing Rh(III) ions as the model surfaces.

Chemistry 16 2730-40 (2010)
Related entries: 3a8z, 3a90, 3a92, 3a93, 3a94, 3a95, 3a96

Cited: 15 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 20146274

Abstract

Metal-ion accumulation on protein surfaces is a crucial step in the initiation of small-metal clusters and the formation of inorganic materials in nature. This event is expected to control the nucleation, growth, and position of the materials. There remain many unknowns, as to how proteins affect the initial process at the atomic level, although multistep assembly processes of the materials formation by both native and model systems have been clarified at the macroscopic level. Herein the cooperative effects of amino acids and hydrogen bonds promoting metal accumulation reactions are clarified by using porous hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) crystals containing Rh(III) ions, as model protein surfaces for the reactions. The experimental results reveal noteworthy implications for initiation of metal accumulation, which involve highly cooperative dynamics of amino acids and hydrogen bonds: i) Disruption of hydrogen bonds can induce conformational changes of amino-acid residues to capture Rh(III) ions. ii) Water molecules pre-organized by hydrogen bonds can stabilize Rh(III) coordination as aqua ligands. iii) Water molecules participating in hydrogen bonds with amino-acid residues can be replaced by Rh(III) ions to form polynuclear structures with the residues. iv) Rh(III) aqua complexes are retained on amino-acid residues through stabilizing hydrogen bonds even at low pH (approximately 2). These metal-protein interactions including hydrogen bonds may promote native metal accumulation reactions and also may be useful in the preparation of new inorganic materials that incorporate proteins.

Reviews citing this publication (4)

  1. Expanding coordination chemistry from protein to protein assembly. Sanghamitra NJ, Ueno T. Chem Commun (Camb) 49 4114-4126 (2013)
  2. Design of a confined environment using protein cages and crystals for the development of biohybrid materials. Abe S, Maity B, Ueno T. Chem Commun (Camb) 52 6496-6512 (2016)
  3. Porous protein crystals as reaction vessels. Ueno T. Chemistry 19 9096-9102 (2013)
  4. Artificial metalloenzymes constructed from hierarchically-assembled proteins. Ueno T, Tabe H, Tanaka Y. Chem Asian J 8 1646-1660 (2013)

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  2. Post-crystal engineering of zinc-substituted myoglobin to construct a long-lived photoinduced charge-separation system. Koshiyama T, Shirai M, Hikage T, Tabe H, Tanaka K, Kitagawa S, Ueno T. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 50 4849-4852 (2011)
  3. Porous protein crystals as reaction vessels for controlling magnetic properties of nanoparticles. Abe S, Tsujimoto M, Yoneda K, Ohba M, Hikage T, Takano M, Kitagawa S, Ueno T. Small 8 1314-1319 (2012)
  4. Porous protein crystals as catalytic vessels for organometallic complexes. Tabe H, Abe S, Hikage T, Kitagawa S, Ueno T. Chem Asian J 9 1373-1378 (2014)
  5. X-ray diffraction of protein crystal grown in a nano-liter scale droplet in a microchannel and evaluation of its applicability. Maeki M, Maeki M, Yoshizuka S, Yamaguchi H, Kawamoto M, Yamashita K, Nakamura H, Miyazaki M, Maeda H. Anal Sci 28 65 (2012)
  6. Percentile-based spread: a more accurate way to compare crystallographic models. Pozharski E. Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 66 970-978 (2010)
  7. Catalysis of gold nanoparticles within lysozyme single crystals. Wei H, Lu Y. Chem Asian J 7 680-683 (2012)
  8. Quantitative characterization of local protein solvation to predict solvent effects on protein structure. Vagenende V, Trout BL. Biophys J 103 1354-1362 (2012)
  9. Unusual Structural Features in the Adduct of Dirhodium Tetraacetate with Lysozyme. Loreto D, Ferraro G, Merlino A. Int J Mol Sci 22 1496 (2021)
  10. A novel hybrid protein composed of superoxide-dismutase-active Cu(II) complex and lysozyme. Furuya T, Nakane D, Kitanishi K, Katsuumi N, Tsaturyan A, Shcherbakov IN, Unno M, Akitsu T. Sci Rep 13 6892 (2023)
  11. IM Metallodrugs: Mechanisms of Action, Molecular Targets and Biological Activity. Ferraro G, Merlino A. Int J Mol Sci 23 3504 (2022)