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1.
Chem ; 10(5): 1528-1540, 2024 May 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38803519

RESUMEN

Hydrogen (H2) has powered microbial metabolism for roughly 4 billion years. The recent discovery that it also fuels geochemical analogs of the most ancient biological carbon fixation pathway sheds light on the origin of metabolism. However, it remains unclear whether H2 can sustain more complex nonenzymatic reaction networks. Here, we show that H2 drives the nonenzymatic reductive amination of six biological ketoacids and glyoxylate to give the corresponding amino acids in good yields using ammonium concentrations ranging from 6 to 150 mM. Catalytic amounts of nickel or ground meteorites enable these reactions at 22°C and pH 8. The same conditions promote an H2-dependent ketoacid-forming reductive aldol chemistry that co-occurs with reductive amination, producing a continuous reaction network resembling amino acid synthesis in the metabolic core of ancient microbes. The results support the hypothesis that the earliest biochemical networks could have emerged without enzymes or RNA.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(51): e202212932, 2022 12 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36251920

RESUMEN

Hydrogen (H2 ) is a geological source of reducing electrons that is thought to have powered the metabolism of the last universal common ancestor to all extant life, and that is still metabolized by various modern organisms. It has been suggested that H2 drove a geochemical analogue of some or all of the reverse Krebs cycle at the emergence of the metabolic network, catalyzed by metals, but this has yet to be demonstrated experimentally. Herein, we show that three consecutive steps of the reverse Krebs cycle, converting oxaloacetate into succinate, can be driven without enzymes and in one-pot by H2 as the reducing agent under mild conditions compatible with biological chemistry. Low catalytic amounts of nickel (10-20 mol %) or platinum group metals (0.1-1 mol %) or even small amounts of ground meteorites were found to promote the reductive chemistry at temperatures between 5 and 60 °C and over a wide pH range, including pH 7. These results lend additional support to the hypothesis that geologically produced hydrogen and metal catalysts could have initiated early metabolic networks.


Asunto(s)
Hidrógeno , Meteoroides , Hidrógeno/química , Ciclo del Ácido Cítrico , Catálisis , Ácido Oxaloacético/química , Metales
3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(23): e202117211, 2022 06 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35304939

RESUMEN

Metabolic theories for the origin of life posit that inorganic catalysts enabled self-organized chemical precursors to the pathways of metabolism, including those that make genetic molecules. Recently, experiments showing nonenzymatic versions of a number of core metabolic pathways have started to support this idea. However, experimental demonstrations of nonenzymatic reaction sequences along the de novo ribonucleotide biosynthesis pathways are limited. Here we show that all three reactions of pyrimidine nucleobase biosynthesis that convert aspartate to orotate proceed at 60 °C without photochemistry under aqueous conditions in the presence of metals such as Cu2+ and Mn4+ . Combining reactions into one-pot variants is also possible. Life may not have invented pyrimidine nucleobase biosynthesis from scratch, but simply refined existing nonenzymatic reaction channels. This work is a first step towards uniting metabolic theories of life's origin with those centered around genetic molecules.


Asunto(s)
Ácido Aspártico , Pirimidinas , Pirimidinas/metabolismo
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(45): 19099-19111, 2021 11 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34730975

RESUMEN

Several classes of biological reactions that are mediated by an enzyme and a co-factor can occur, to a slower extent, not only without the enzyme but even without the co-factor, under catalysis by metal ions. This observation has led to the proposal that metabolic pathways progressively evolved from using inorganic catalysts to using organocatalysts of increasing complexity. Transamination, the biological process by which ammonia is transferred between amino acids and α-keto acids, has a mechanism that has been well studied under enzyme/co-factor catalysis and under co-factor catalysis, but the metal ion-catalyzed variant was generally studied mostly at high temperatures (70-100 °C), and the details of its mechanism remained unclear. Here, we investigate which metal ions catalyze transamination under conditions relevant to biology (pH 7, 20-50 °C) and study the mechanism in detail. Cu2+, Ni2+, Co2+, and V5+ were identified as the most active metal ions under these constraints. Kinetic, stereochemical, and computational studies illuminate the mechanism of the reaction. Cu2+ and Co2+ are found to predominantly speed up the reaction by stabilizing a key imine intermediate. V5+ is found to accelerate the reaction by increasing the acidity of the bound imine. Ni2+ is found to do both to a limited extent. These results show that direct metal ion-catalyzed amino group transfer is highly favored even in the absence of co-factors or protein catalysts under biologically compatible reaction conditions.

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