Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.44, No.21, 7559-7569, 2005
Phosphate triester hydrolysis promoted by an N2S(thiolate)Zn complex: Mechanistic implications for the metal-dependent reactivity of peptide deformylase
The zinc(II) complex (PATH)ZnOH, where PATH is an N2S(thiolate) ligand, has been investigated for its ability to promote the hydrolysis of the phosphate triester tris(4-nitrophenyl) phosphate (TNP). The hydrolysis of TNP was examined as a function of PATH-zinc(II) complex concentration, substrate concentration, and pH in a water/ethanol mixture (66:33 v/v) at 25 degrees C. The reaction is first order in both zinc(II) complex and substrate, and the second-order rate constants were derived from linear plots of the observed pseudo-first-order rate constants versus zinc complex concentration at different pH values. A pH-rate profile yielded a kinetic pK(a) of 8.52(5) for the zinc-bound water molecule and a pH-independent rate constant of 16.1(7) M-1 s(-1). Temperature-dependent studies showed linear Eyring behavior, yielding the activation parameters Delta H-double dagger = 36.9(1) U mol(-1) and Delta S-double dagger = -106.7(4) J mol(-1) K-1. Interpretation of the kinetic data leads to the conclusion that hydrolysis of TNP takes place through a hybrid mechanism, in which the metal center plays a dual role of providing a nucleophilic hydroxide and activating the substrate through a Lewis acid effect. The synthesis and structural characterization of the related nickel(II) and iron(II) complexes [(PATH)(2)Ni-2]Br-2 (2) and (PATH)(2)Fe2Cl2 (3) are also described. Taken together, these data suggest a possible explanation for the low reactivity of the zinc(II) form of peptide deformylase as compared to the iron(II) form.