Modeling the Enzyme Specificity by Molecular Cages through Regulating Reactive Oxygen Species Evolution

Author:

Yuan Jiang‐Pei1,Guan Zong‐Jie1,Lin Heng‐Yu2,Yan Bing1,Liu Kang‐Kai1,Zhou Hong‐Cai2,Fang Yu13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory for Chemo/Bio-Sensing and Chemometrics, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Hunan University Changsha 410082, Hunan China

2. Department of Chemistry Texas A&M University College Station TX 77843–3255 USA

3. Innovation Institute of Industrial Design and Machine Intelligence Quanzhou-Hunan University Quanzhou 362801, Fujian China

Abstract

AbstractMimicking the active site and the substrate binding cavity of the enzyme to achieve specificity in catalytic reactions is an essential challenge. Herein, porous coordination cages (PCCs) with intrinsic cavities and tunable metal centers have proved the regulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generating pathways as evidenced by multiple photo‐induced oxidations. Remarkably, in the presence of the Zn4‐μ4‐O center, PCC converted dioxygen molecules from triplet to singlet excitons, whereas the Ni4‐μ4‐O center promoted the efficient dissociation of electrons and holes to conduct electron transfer towards substrates. Accordingly, the distinct ROS generation behavior of PCC‐6‐Zn and PCC‐6‐Ni enables the conversion of O2 to 1O2 and O2, respectively. In contrast, the Co4‐μ4‐O center combined the 1O2 and O2 together to generate carbonyl radicals, which in turn reacted with the oxygen molecules. Harnessing the three oxygen activation pathways, PCC‐6‐M (M=Zn/Ni/Co) display specific catalytic activities in thioanisole oxidation (PCC‐6‐Zn), benzylamine coupling (PCC‐6‐Ni), and aldehyde autoxidation (PCC‐6‐Co). This work not only provides fundamental insights into the regulation of ROS generation by a supramolecular catalyst but also demonstrates a rare example of achieving reaction specificity through mimicking natural enzymes by PCCs.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Hunan Provincial Science and Technology Department

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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