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  1. Two conserved second-sphere βArg (R) residues in nitrile hydratases (NHase), that form hydrogen bonds with the catalytically essential sulfenic and sulfinic acid ligands, were mutated to Lys and Ala residues in the Co-type NHase from Pseudonocardia thermophila JCM 3095 (PtNHase) and the Fe-type NHase from Rhodococcus equi TG328–2 (ReNHase). Only five of the eight mutants (PtNHase βR52A, βR52K, βR157A, βR157K and ReNHase βR61A) were successfully expressed and purified. Apart from the PtNHase βR52A mutant that exhibited no detectable activity, the kcat values obtained for the PtNHase and ReNHase βR mutant enzymes were between 1.8 and 12.4 s− 1 amounting to <1% of the kcat values observed for WT enzymes. The metal content of each mutant was also significantly decreased with occupancies ranging from ~10 to ~40%. UV–Vis spectra coupled with EPR data obtained on the ReNHase mutant enzyme, suggest a decrease in the Lewis acidity of the active site metal ion. X-ray crystal structures of the four PtNHase βR mutant enzymes confirmed the mutation and the low active site metal content, while also providing insight into the active site hydrogen bonding network. Finally, DFT calcu- lations suggest that the equatorial sulfenic acid ligand, which has been shown to be the catalytic nucleophile, is protonated in the mutant enzyme. Taken together, these data confirm the necessity of the conserved second- sphere βR residues in the proposed subunit swapping process and post-translational modification of the α-sub- unit in the α activator complex, along with stabilizing the catalytic sulfenic acid in its anionic form. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2025
  2. Abstract

    With the aim of constructing hydrogen‐bonding networks in synthetic complexes, two new ligands derived fromcis,cis‐1,3,5‐triaminocyclohexane (TACH) have been prepared that feature pendant pyrrole or indole rings as outer‐sphere H‐bond donors. The TACH framework offers a facial arrangement of threeN‐donors, thereby mimicking common coordination motifs in the active sites of nonheme Fe and Cu enzymes. X‐ray structural characterization of a series of CuI‐X complexes (X=F, Cl, Br, NCS) revealed that these neutral ligands (H3LR, R=pyrrole or indole) coordinate in the intended facialN3manner, yielding four‐coordinate complexes with idealizedC3symmetry. The N−H units of the outer‐sphere heterocycles form a hydrogen‐bonding cavity around the axial (pseudo)halide ligand, as verified by crystallographic, spectroscopic, and computational analyses. Treatment of H3Lpyrroleand H3Lindolewith divalent transition metal chlorides (MIICl2, M=Fe, Cu, Zn) causes one heterocycle to deprotonate and coordinate to the M(II) center, giving rise to tetradentate ligands with two remaining outer‐sphere H‐bond donors. Further ligand deprotonation is observed upon reaction with Ni(II) and Cu(II) salts with weakly coordinating counteranions. The reported complexes highlight the versatility of TACH‐based ligands with pendant H‐bond donors, as the resulting scaffolds can support multiple protonation states, coordination geometries, and H‐bonding interactions.

     
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  3. The activation of O 2 at thiolate–ligated iron( ii ) sites is essential to the function of numerous metalloenzymes and synthetic catalysts. Iron–thiolate bonds in the active sites of nonheme iron enzymes arise from either coordination of an endogenous cysteinate residue or binding of a deprotonated thiol-containing substrate. Examples of the latter include sulfoxide synthases, such as EgtB and OvoA, that utilize O 2 to catalyze tandem S–C bond formation and S -oxygenation steps in thiohistidine biosyntheses. We recently reported the preparation of two mononuclear nonheme iron–thiolate complexes (1 and 2) that serve as structural active-site models of substrate-bound EgtB and OvoA ( Dalton Trans. 2020, 49 , 17745–17757). These models feature monodentate thiolate ligands and tripodal N 4 ligands with mixed pyridyl/imidazolyl donors. Here, we describe the reactivity of 1 and 2 with O 2 at low temperatures to give metastable intermediates (3 and 4, respectively). Characterization with multiple spectroscopic techniques (UV-vis absorption, NMR, variable-field and -temperature Mössbauer, and resonance Raman) revealed that these intermediates are thiolate-ligated iron( iii ) dimers with a bridging oxo ligand derived from the four-electron reduction of O 2 . Structural models of 3 and 4 consistent with the experimental data were generated via density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The combined experimental and computational results illuminate the geometric and electronic origins of the unique spectral features of diiron( iii )-μ-oxo complexes with thiolate ligands, and the spectroscopic signatures of 3 and 4 are compared to those of closely-related diiron( iii )-μ-peroxo species. Collectively, these results will assist in the identification of intermediates that appear on the O 2 reaction landscapes of iron–thiolate species in both biological and synthetic environments. 
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  4. null (Ed.)