Crystal structure and mechanism of a bacterial fluorinating enzyme
Top Cited Papers
- 1 February 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 427 (6974) , 561-565
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature02280
Abstract
Fluorine is the thirteenth most abundant element in the earth's crust, but fluoride concentrations in surface water are low and fluorinated metabolites are extremely rare(1,2). The fluoride ion is a potent nucleophile in its desolvated state, but is tightly hydrated in water and effectively inert. Low availability and a lack of chemical reactivity have largely excluded fluoride from biochemistry: in particular, fluorine's high redox potential precludes the haloperoxidase-type mechanism(3,4) used in the metabolic incorporation of chloride and bromide ions. But fluorinated chemicals are growing in industrial importance, with applications in pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals and materials products(5-7). Reactive fluorination reagents requiring specialist process technologies are needed in industry and, although biological catalysts for these processes are highly sought after, only one enzyme that can convert fluoride to organic fluorine has been described(8). Streptomyces cattleya can form carbon-fluorine bonds(9) and must therefore have evolved an enzyme able to overcome the chemical challenges of using aqueous fluoride. Here we report the sequence and three-dimensional structure of the first native fluorination enzyme, 5'-fluoro-5'-deoxyadenosine synthase, from this organism. Both substrate and products have been observed bound to the enzyme, enabling us to propose a nucleophilic substitution mechanism for this biological fluorination reaction.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Isolation and characterisation of 5′‐fluorodeoxyadenosine synthase, a fluorination enzyme from Streptomyces cattleyaFEBS Letters, 2003
- 5-Fluorouracil Derivatives from the Sponge Phakellia fuscaJournal of Natural Products, 2003
- Biosynthesis of an organofluorine moleculeNature, 2002
- Enzymatic Synthesis of Carbon−Fluorine BondsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2001
- Organofluorine chemistryPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 2000
- Haloperoxidases and their role in biotransformation reactionsCurrent Opinion in Chemical Biology, 1999
- Elemental Fluorine in Organic ChemistryPublished by Springer Nature ,1997
- BIOSYNTHESIS OF HALOGENATED METABOLITES BY BACTERIAAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1996
- Modern methods for the introduction of fluorine into organic molecules: an approach to compounds with altered chemical and biological activitiesChemical Society Reviews, 1987
- Biosynthesis of fluorothreonine and fluoroacetic acid by the thienamycin producer, Streptomyces cattleya.The Journal of Antibiotics, 1986