pyrophosphate and 2-methyl-5-6-cyclopentapyrimidine

pyrophosphate has been researched along with 2-methyl-5-6-cyclopentapyrimidine* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for pyrophosphate and 2-methyl-5-6-cyclopentapyrimidine

ArticleYear
Irreversible Inhibition of IspG, a Target for the Development of New Antimicrobials, by a 2-Vinyl Analogue of its MEcPP Substrate.
    Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany), 2022, May-25, Volume: 28, Issue:30

    IspG (also called GcpE) is an oxygen-sensitive [4Fe-4S] enzyme catalyzing the penultimate step of the methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) pathway, a validated target for drug development. It converts 2-C-methyl-d-erythritol-2,4-cyclo-diphosphate (MEcPP) into (E)-4-hydroxy-3-methyl-but-2-enyl-1-diphosphate (HMBPP). The reaction, assimilated to a reductive dehydration, involves redox partners responsible for the formal transfer of two electrons to substrate MEcPP. The 2-vinyl analogue of MEcPP was designed to generate conjugated species during enzyme catalysis, with the aim of providing new reactive centers to be covalently trapped by neighboring amino acid residues. The synthesized substrate analogue displayed irreversible inhibition towards IspG. Furthermore, we have shown that electron transfer occurs prior to inhibition; this might designate conjugated intermediates as probable affinity tags through covalent interaction at the catalytic site. This is the first report of an irreversible inhibitor of the IspG metalloenzyme.

    Topics: Catalytic Domain; Diphosphates; Electron Transport; Erythritol; Pyrimidines

2022
A proposed mechanism for the reductive ring opening of the cyclodiphosphate MEcPP, a crucial transformation in the new DXP/MEP pathway to isoprenoids based on modeling studies and feeding experiments.
    Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology, 2004, Mar-05, Volume: 5, Issue:3

    Experimental and theoretical investigations concerning the second-to-last step of the DXP/MEP pathway in isoprenoid biosynthesis in plants are reported. The proposed intrinsic or late intermediates 4-oxo-DMAPP (12) and 4-hydroxy-DMAPP (11) were synthesized in deuterium- or tritium-labeled form according to new protocols especially adapted to work without protection of the diphosphate moiety. When the labeled compounds MEcPP (7), 11, and 12 were applied to chromoplast cultures, aldehyde 12 was not incorporated. This finding is in agreement with a mechanistic and structural model of the responsible enzyme family: a three-dimensional model of the fragment L271-A375 of the enzyme GcpE of Streptomyces coelicolor including NADPH, the Fe(4)S(4) cluster, and MEcPP (7) as ligand has been developed based on homology modeling techniques. The model has been accepted by the Protein Data Bank (entry code 1OX2). Supported by this model, semiempirical PM3 calculations were performed to analyze the likely catalysis mechanism of the reductive ring opening of MEcPP (7), hydroxyl abstraction, and formation of HMBPP (8). The mechanism is characterized by a proton transfer (presumably from a conserved arginine 286) to the substrate, accompanied by a ring opening without high energy barriers, followed by the transfer of two electrons delivered from the Fe(4)S(4) cluster, and finally proton transfer from a carboxylic acid side chain to the hydroxyl group to be removed from the ligand as water. The proposed mechanism is in agreement with all known experimental findings and the arrangement of the ligand within the enzyme. Thus, a very likely mechanism for the second to last step of the DXP/MEP pathway in isoprenoid biosynthesis in plants is presented. A principally similar mechanism is also expected for the reductive dehydroxylation of HMBPP (8) to IPP (9) and DMAPP (10) in the last step.

    Topics: Catalysis; Diphosphates; Hemiterpenes; Iron-Sulfur Proteins; Isotopes; Models, Molecular; Organophosphates; Organophosphorus Compounds; Plants; Plastids; Pyrimidines; Structural Homology, Protein; Terpenes; Xylose

2004