Abstract
A structural unit found in the active site of some copper proteins, the histidine brace, is comprised of an N-terminal histidine that chelates a single copper ion through its amino terminus NH2 and the π–N of its imidazole side chain. Coordination is completed by the τ-N of a further histidine side chain, to give an overall N3 T-shaped coordination at the copper ion. The histidine brace appears in several proteins, including lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases LPMOs and particulate methane monooxygenases pMMOs, both of which catalyse the oxidation of substrates with strong C–H bonds (bond dissociation enthalpies ~100 kcal mol–1). As such, the copper histidine brace is the focus of research aimed at understanding how nature catalyses the oxidation of unactivated C–H bonds. In this Perspective, we evaluate these studies, which further give bioinspired direction to coordination chemists in the design and preparation of small molecule copper oxidation catalysts. The histidine brace found in certain copper oxidases enables the oxidation of strong C–H bonds in organic substrates. This Perspective highlights and discusses the possible structural and electronic features of this motif and how these features underlie its role in challenging oxidative catalysis.
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