Myoglobin-Catalyzed
Azide Reduction Proceeds via an
Anionic Metal Amide Intermediate
Posted on 2024-01-09 - 20:07
Nitrene transfer
reactions catalyzed by heme proteins have broad
potential for the stereoselective formation of carbon–nitrogen
bonds. However, competition between productive nitrene transfer and
the undesirable reduction of nitrene precursors limits the broad implementation
of such biocatalytic methods. Here, we investigated the reduction
of azides by the model heme protein myoglobin to gain mechanistic
insights into the factors that control the fate of key reaction intermediates.
In this system, the reaction proceeds via a proposed nitrene intermediate
that is rapidly reduced and protonated to give a reactive ferrous
amide species, which we characterized by UV/vis and Mössbauer
spectroscopies, quantum mechanical calculations, and X-ray crystallography.
Rate-limiting protonation of the ferrous amide to produce the corresponding
amine is the final step in the catalytic cycle. These findings contribute
to our understanding of the heme protein-catalyzed reduction of azides
and provide a guide for future enzyme engineering campaigns to create
more efficient nitrene transferases. Moreover, harnessing the reduction
reaction in a chemoenzymatic cascade provided a potentially practical
route to substituted pyrroles.
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Tinzl, Matthias; Diedrich, Johannes V.; Mittl, Peer R. E.; Clémancey, Martin; Reiher, Markus; Proppe, Jonny; et al. (2024). Myoglobin-Catalyzed
Azide Reduction Proceeds via an
Anionic Metal Amide Intermediate. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3c09279