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Wiley, ChemPhysChem, 14(12), p. 2596-2603

DOI: 10.1002/cphc.201100336

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Unraveling Gold(I)-Specific Action Towards Peptidic Disulfide Cleavage: A DFT Investigation

Journal article published in 2011 by Elise Dumont ORCID, Carine Michel, Philippe Sautet
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Ground-state disulfide dissociation is a target of prime importance in structural biochemistry. A main difficulty consists in avoiding competition with carbon–sulfur and backbone scission pathways. In tandem mass spectrometry, such selectivity is afforded using transition elements or coinage-metal ions as catalyst. Yet, the underlying gas-phase mechanistic details remain poorly understood. Gold(I)-assisted disulfide cleavage is investigated by means of DFT calculations, to elucidate the highly selective and specific catalytic action of this transition-metal cation, a most promising one in tandem mass spectrometry. The preferential cleavage of sulfur–sulfur versus carbon–sulfur linkages on dimethyldisulfide, taken as a prototypical aliphatic compound, is rationalized on the basis of molecular orbital arguments. Secondly, it is revealed that the disulfide dissociation profile is dramatically impacted by a peptidic environment. Calculations on l,l-cystine derivatives show two main factors: the topological frustration for an embedded -CH2[BOND]S[BOND]S[BOND]CH2- motif induces a 5 kcal mol−1 penalty, whereas electrophilic assistance via complexation of nitrogen and oxygen atoms lowers activation barriers by a factor of 3. S[BOND]S weakening is both thermodynamically and kinetically driven by the versatile coordination mode of gold(I). The influence of amine-terminus group protonation is finally sketched: it gives rise to an intermediate reactivity. This study sheds lights on the key action of the peptidic environment in tuning the dissociation profile in the presence of this transition-metal monocation.