Abstract

SummaryBy mimicking the synergistic interplay of primary and secondary coordination spheres within native peroxidases, we demonstrate a scaffold-free, yet highly effective molecular-level cooperation between an iron(III)-containing hemin cofactor and exogenous histamine in accelerating a peroxidase-like reaction. Density functional theory computations predict that, among structurally similar molecules, the histamine is the most interactive partner of hemin to elicit a spontaneous peroxidation by electrostatically attracting the proton of hydrogen peroxide to its own imidazole and thermodynamically stabilizing a transition-state intermediate. Although the molecular weight of hemin-histamine pair is 763, 1.7% of the horseradish peroxidase, cooperative catalysis of two natural molecules exhibits 17.3 times greater catalytic efficiency (17.93 M−1s−1) and 57.8 times larger specific activity (36.45 μmol/min·mg) than the hemin alone (1.04 M−1s−1 and 0.63 μmol/min·mg). Despite no scaffold or covalent linkage, the self-assembly with hemin is highly histamine-specific in complex environments, leading rapid color changes by substrate oxidation within 10 s.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call