Induced fit activity-based sensing: a mechanistic study of pyrophosphate detection with a "flexible" Fe-salen complex.
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ABSTRACT: Activity-based sensing of biological targets is attracting increasing attention. In this work, we report detailed UV-Vis and fluorescence mechanistic studies on an Fe-salen based probe, [FeIII{salenMeCl2(SO3)2}OH2]- for pyrophosphate (PPi) detection. In the presence of PPi as an analyte, the probe disassembles into its molecular subunits and releases a fluorescent signal. Our studies illustrate that the aqua form of the complex (1-OH2) is the active species and that upon substitution of Fe-coordinated H2O and an initial end-on coordination of HP2O7 3-, the "trapped" pyrophosphate species switches from a monodentate to a bidentate coordination mode (i.e. linkage isomerism) via a probable equilibrium process. The elusive intermediate is further stabilized by a hydrogen bonding interaction that activates the probe for the subsequent final irreversible rate-limiting step, and allows selective discrimination between the other pyrophosphate (H2P2O7 2- and P2O7 4-) species in favour of the HP2O7 3-. The flexible mode of molecular recognition and binding of HP2O7 3- by the tetradentate probe 1-OH2 is unexpected and most effective at physiological pH, and has precedence in enzymatic catalysis (i.e. induced fit principle). These binding properties explain the previously observed outstanding selectivity of 1-OH2 for pyrophosphate over other (poly)oxophosphates and potentially competing analytes.
SUBMITTER: Yadav P
PROVIDER: S-EPMC8477187 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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