Abstract

Soft metal ions can inactivate urease, a Ni(II)-dependent enzyme whose hydrolytic activity has significant implications in agro-environmental science and human health. Kinetic and structural studies of the reaction of Canavalia ensiformis urease (JBU) and Sporosarcina pasteurii urease (SPU) with Ag(I) compounds of general formula [Ag(PEt3)X]4 (X = Cl, Br, I), and with the ionic species [Ag(PEt3)2]NO3, revealed the role of the Ag(I) ion and its ligands in modulating the metal-enzyme interaction. The activity of JBU is obliterated by the [Ag(PEt3)X]4 complexes, with IC50 values in the nanomolar range; the efficiency of the inhibition increases in the Cl− < Br− < I− order. The activity of JBU upon [Ag(PEt3)2]NO3 addition decreases to a plateau corresponding to ca. 60% of the original activity and decreases with time at a reduced rate. Synchrotron X-ray crystallography on single crystals obtained after the incubation of SPU with the Ag(I) complexes yielded high-resolution (1.63–1.97 Å) structures. The metal-protein adducts entail a dinuclear Ag(I) cluster bound to the conserved residues αCys322, αHis323, and αMet367, with a bridging cysteine thiolate atom, a weak Ag…Ag bond, and a quasi-linear Ag(I) coordination geometry. These observations suggest a mechanism that involves the initial substitution of the phosphine ligand, followed by a structural rearrangement to yield the dinuclear Ag(I) cluster. These findings indicate that urease, in addition to the active site dinuclear Ni(II) cluster, possesses a secondary metal binding site, located on the mobile flap domain, capable of recognizing pairs of soft metal ions and controlling catalysis.

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