Carbon Monoxide Dehydrogenase Reduces Cyanate to Cyanide

Journal article


Publication Details


Author list: Ciaccafava A., Tombolelli D., Domnik L., Jeoung J.H., Dobbek H., Mroginski M.A., Zebger I., Hildebrandt P.

Journal: Angewandte Chemie International Edition

Publication year: 2017

Volume number: 56

Issue number: 26

Pages: 7398-7401

Publisher: Wiley-VCH Verlag

ISSN: 1433-7851

eISSN: 1521-3773

DOI: 10.1002/anie.201703225

URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85019595432&origin=inward

Languages: English-Great Britain


Abstract


The biocatalytic function of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) has a high environmental relevance owing to its ability to reduce CO2. Despite numerous studies on CODH over the past decades, its catalytic mechanism is not yet fully understood. In the present combined spectroscopic and theoretical study, we report first evidences for a cyanate (NCO−) to cyanide (CN−) reduction at the C-cluster. The adduct remains bound to the catalytic center to form the so-called CN−-inhibited state. Notably, this conversion does not occur in crystals of the Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans CODH enzyme (CODHIICh), as indicated by the lack of the corresponding CN− stretching mode. The transformation of NCO−, which also acts as an inhibitor of the two-electron-reduced Cred2 state of CODH, could thus mimic CO2 turnover and open new perspectives for elucidation of the detailed catalytic mechanism of CODH.



Authors/Editors

Last updated on 2022-28-09 at 20:07