S-2,3-Dicarboxyaziridine

S-2,3-Dicarboxyaziridine

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S-2,3-Dicarboxyaziridine
Category Antibiotics
Catalog number BBF-01387
CAS 57528-68-4
Molecular Weight 131.09
Molecular Formula C4H5NO4

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Description

It is produced by the strain of Streptomyces sp. It has the activity of resistant gram-positive and negative bacteria, especially the Aeromonas salmonecida.

Specification

Synonyms 2,3-Dicarboxyaziridine
IUPAC Name (2S,3S)-aziridine-2,3-dicarboxylic acid
Canonical SMILES C1(C(N1)C(=O)O)C(=O)O
InChI InChI=1S/C4H5NO4/c6-3(7)1-2(5-1)4(8)9/h1-2,5H,(H,6,7)(H,8,9)/t1-,2-/m0/s1
InChI Key IFCCPDAHQDGHMH-LWMBPPNESA-N

Properties

Appearance Achromatic Flake Crystalline
Antibiotic Activity Spectrum Gram-positive bacteria; Gram-negative bacteria
Boiling Point 451°C at 760 mmHg
Melting Point 178°C
Density 1.776 g/cm3

Reference Reading

1. Inhibition of fumarase by S-2,3-dicarboxyaziridine
J Greenhut, H Umezawa, F B Rudolph J Biol Chem. 1985 Jun 10;260(11):6684-6.
S-2,3-Dicarboxyaziridine was found to be a potent competitive inhibitor (Ki = 0.08 microM) of fumarase from pig heart. The aziridine did not inactivate the enzyme or exhibit any observable substrate activity. It is likely that it functions as a transition state analogue mimicking the carbanion intermediate found in the normal catalytic reaction. The aziridine inhibited fumarate utilization in ruptured but not intact mitochondria.
2. Specific inhibition of aspartase by S-2,3-dicarboxyaziridine
Y Higashi, M Tokushige, H Umezawa Biochem Int. 1988 Mar;16(3):449-52.
Aspartase of Escherichia coli was inhibited in a competitive manner by S-2,3-dicarboxyazirdine (DCAZ), an antibacterial substance against Aeromonas salmonesida. The inhibition constant (Ki) was 55 microM, which was as low as less than one tenth that of the Km value for the substrate, L-aspartate. In view of the fact that both aspartase and fumarase (J. Greenhut et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 6684-6686) were inhibited by DCAZ in competitive manners, common features of the reaction mechanism of the two enzymes were discussed.
3. How fumarase recycles after the malate --> fumarate reaction. Insights into the reaction mechanism
I A Rose Biochemistry. 1998 Dec 22;37(51):17651-8. doi: 10.1021/bi9821521.
Recycling of yeast fumarase to permit repetition of its reaction chemistry requires two proton transfers and two conformational changes, in pathways that are different in detail but thematically similar in the two directions. In the malate --> fumarate direction, simple anions such as acetate accelerate the fumarate-off step producing E(H(f)), a fumarate-specific isoform that retains the C3R-proton of malate. Fumarate specificity is shown with S-2,3-dicarboxyaziridine, which is competitive vs fumarate and noncompetitive with malate as substrate. The steady-state level of E(H(f)), based on Kii (S-2,3-dicarboxyaziridine), is increased by D2O and decreased by imidazole acting as a general acid for conversion of E(H(f)) to E(H(f))H. E(H(f))H is fumarate-specific as shown by the inhibition pattern with ClO4-. The pKa of this step is approximately 7.25 based on the pH dependence of Kii (ClO4-). A conformational change occurs next as shown by high sensitivity of k(cat) but not k(cat)/Km, to the microviscosogen, glycerol, and change to a nonspecific isoform, E(H(mf))H, probably the same species formed in the fumarate --> malate direction from malate-specific intermediates by a different conformational change. Malate enters the cycle by reaction with E(H(mf))H and returns to E(m)H x malate after a second conformational change. When fumarate-off is slow, as in low anion medium, malate itself becomes an activator of malate --> fumarate. This effect occurs with changes in inhibition patterns suggestive of the bypass of the slow E(f) --> E(mf) conversion in favor of direct formation of E(mf) when free fumarate is formed. 3-Nitro-2-hydroxypropionate, a strong inhibitor of fumarase [Porter, D. J. T., and Bright, H. J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 4772-4780] in its carbanion form, is competitive with both malate and fumarate. Therefore, 3-nitro-2-hydroxypropionic acid interacts with E(H(mf))H and not with E(m) or E(f) isoforms. Occurrence of two different conformational changes in the recycling process suggests that the reaction chemistry employs a two-step mechanism. The specificity of inhibition for E(H(mf))H is consistent with the expected intermediate of a carbanion mechanism, E(H)H x carbanion-. The proton transfers and conformational changes of recycling occur in the same sequence that is expected for this reaction chemistry. Several examples of ligand-activated conformational changes are reported.

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Tip: Chemical formula is case sensitive. C22H30N4O c22h30n40
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