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Computer-assisted study on the reaction between pyruvate
and ylide in the pathway leading to lactyl–ThDP
Omar Alvarado • Gonzalo Jan˜a • Eduardo J. Delgado
Received: 9 May 2012 / Accepted: 5 July 2012 / Published online: 11 July 2012
Ó Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012
Abstract In this study the formation of the lactyl–thia-
min diphosphate intermediate (L–ThDP) is addressed using
density functional theory calculations at X3LYP/6-
31??G(d,p) level of theory. The study includes potential
energy surface scans, transition state search, and intrinsic
reaction coordinate calculations. Reactivity is analyzed in
terms of Fukui functions. The results allow to conclude that
the reaction leading to the formation of L–ThDP occurs via
a concerted mechanism, and during the nucleophilic attack
on the pyruvate molecule, the ylide is in its AP form. The
calculated activation barrier for the reaction is 19.2 kcal/
mol, in agreement with the experimental reported value.
Keywords L–ThDP Á Mechanism Á DFT Á Fukui Á
Activation barrier
Introduction
Thiamin diphosphate (ThDP) is an important coenzyme in
a variety of enzymes involved in the decarboxylation of
a-keto acids in sugar metabolism. It is composed of two
aromatic rings, a 4-aminopyrimidine ring and a thiazolium
ring bridged by a methylene group [1, 2]. During the
catalysis by ThDP enzymes, the 40
-aminopyrimidine moi-
ety can interconvert among four ionization/tautomeric
states: the 40
-aminopyrimidine (AP), the N10
-protonated
40
-amino pyrimidium (APH?
), 10
,40
-iminopyrimidine (IP),
and the C2-ionizated ylide (Y1). In all ThDP-dependent
enzymes, the catalytic cycle is initiated with the attack of
the C2 atom of the ylide on the Ca of a pyruvate molecule
to form the lactyl–ThDP (L–ThDP) intermediate, which
then undergoes decarboxylation to form the hydroxy-
ethylthiamin diphosphate (HEThDP) enamine/carbanion.
Then, HEThDP reacts with a second molecule of an
a-keto acid to form the intermediate AHA–ThDP, which
finally leads to the product release and the ylide recover
(Fig. 1).
Despite the number of articles published on the catalytic
cycle of ThDP-dependent enzymes, still there exist some
aspects which remain unknown or controversial [3–6].
Specifically on the L–ThDP intermediate, there are some
issues that stay unclear, namely, the protonation states of
the N10
and N40
atoms, during the attack of C2 on the Ca of
pyruvate, since not all of the ionization/tautomeric forms
have been clearly characterized [2]. On the other hand, the
manner the reaction occurs, i.e., via a stepwise or concerted
mechanism, has not been clearly elucidated and remains as
a controversial issue [7].
In this study the formation of the L–ThDP intermediate
is addressed using high level density functional theory
calculations, X3LYP/6-31??G(d,p). The study includes
potential energy surface (PES) scans in order to identify
and characterize critical points on it, transition state search,
and intrinsic reaction coordinate calculations. Reactivity is
analyzed in terms of Fukui functions.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
article (doi:10.1007/s10822-012-9589-3) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
O. Alvarado Á G. Jan˜a Á E. J. Delgado (&)
Computational Biological Chemistry Group (QBC), Faculty
of Chemical Sciences, Universidad de Concepcio´n,
Concepcio´n, Chile
e-mail: edelgado@udec.cl
G. Jan˜a
Departamento de Ciencias Quı´micas, Facultad de Ciencias
Exactas, Sede Concepcio´n, Universidad Andre´s Bello,
Concepcio´n, Chile
123
J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982
DOI 10.1007/s10822-012-9589-3
Computational methods
The quantum chemical calculations were performed con-
sidering a reduced system consisting of ThDP, the con-
served side chain of glutamic acid interacting with the N10
atom of ThDP, and the pyruvate molecule. In order to
simplify the calculations the diphosphate group of ThDP
was replaced with –OH, since its primary function is to
anchor the cofactor and it is not involved in the catalytic
mechanism; and the side chains of the protein were ignored
except for the above mentioned glutamic which was
replaced by acetic acid. The geometries of all structures
were optimized in gas phase using the same level of theory
X3LYP/6-31??G(d,p). This functional has been reported
to give very good geometries of hydrogen-bonded complex
[8, 9].
The PES was explored defining two reaction coordi-
nates, namely, the distance C2–Ca, defined between the C2
atom of the pyrimidyl ring of the ylide and the Ca of the
pyruvate molecule; and the distance O–H, defined between
the carbonyl oxygen atom on Ca, in the pyruvate molecule,
and the proton in the 40
-amino group of ThDP (Fig. 2). The
first reaction coordinate corresponds to the attack of C2 on
the Ca of pyruvate, and the second one corresponds to the
proton transfer from the N40
atom to the the carbonyl
oxygen of the pyruvate molecule. Critical points on the
PES were characterized by vibrational frequency calcula-
tions in order to identify local minima or saddle points.
Intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) calculations were car-
ried out at the same level of theory to confirm the opti-
mized transition state geometry. All quantum chemical
calculations in this study were carried out using the Jaguar
7.0 suite of programs [10].
Results and discussion
Prior to the exploration of the PES, the protonation state of
the pyrimidyl ring, upon the attack of the ylide on the
pyruvate molecule, was investigated in terms of reactivity
as expressed by the Fukui functions. The results show that
in the case of the APH?
form, the accepted form in liter-
ature [11–13], the most important nucleophile centers are
the oxygen atoms of the carboxylate group interacting with
N10
atom, and not the C2 atom as required for a
Fig. 1 Catalytic cycle of
ThDP-dependent enzymes
Fig. 2 Definition of the reaction coordinates
978 J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982
123
nucleophilic attack on the Ca atom of the pyruvate mole-
cule (Fig. 3). This suggests that the carboxylic group
should be protonated, as expected from the values of the
physiological pH and the pKa of glutamic acid in the
enzymatic ambient. The AP form, instead, shows the C2
atom as the most important nucleophile center, as expected
(Fig. 4). The calculated atomic fÀ
C2 Fukui index on the C2
atom, for the AP and APH?
forms, are 0.26 and 0.00,
respectively, corroborating the strong nucleophilic char-
acter of the C2 atom in the AP form, versus its negligible
nucleophilic tendency in the APH?
form. These results
suggest that the nucleophilic attack of the C2 atom on the
Ca of pyruvate requires the ylide in the AP form, ylide
(AP). This finding has not been reported earlier and rep-
resent a new approach of the reaction mechanism.
On the other hand, the reactivity analysis of the pyruvate
molecule shows important reactivity as nucleophile of the
oxygen atoms, whereas the Ca atom appears to be an
electrophile center (Fig. 5). The respective condensed-
to-atom Fukui indices for the Ca and carbonyl oxygen
atoms are fþ
Ca ¼ 0:50 and fÀ
O ¼ 0:24. These complimentary
chacteristics between the ylide and pyruvate assure that the
reaction be feasible, therefore the exploration of the PES
was carried out considering the ylide (AP) form.
The PES shows three critical points that are associated
to the reactants (R), transition state (TS) and product
(L–ThDP) (Figs. 6, 7). The topology of the surface sug-
gests that the reaction occurs via a concerted mechanism,
i.e., the C2 atom gradually attacks the carbonyl oxygen of
Fig. 3 Nucleophilic character of the ylide in its APH?
form as
expressed by the f-
Fukui function (red cloud)
Fig. 4 Nucleophilic character of the ylide in its AP form as expressed
by the f-
Fukui function (red cloud)
Fig. 5 Nucleophilic character of the isolated pyruvate molecule as
expressed by the f-
Fukui function (red cloud)
Fig. 6 3-D view of the potential energy surface (PES)
J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 979
123
pyruvate, while the proton on the N40
atom is gradually
transferred to the carbonyl oxygen of pyruvate. The exis-
tence of one saddle point is also observed in the reaction
pathway.
The optimized structure of the reactant state, coordinates
*4.5, 3.5 on the PES, is shown in Fig. 8. The dihedral
angles /T and /P for the ylide are 98° and –84°, respec-
tively. Even though in the ylide (AP) the N10
atom is not
protonated, the proton of the carboxylic group is in close
proximity, 1.67 A˚ , forming a strong hydrogen bond
between them.
The TS search was carried out using a quasi-Newton
method as implemented in Jaguar. The method searches for
the TS nearest to the initial geometry guess. The initial TS
geometry was estimated from the location of the observed
saddle point on the PES. The search led to a struc-
ture having one and only one negative frequency,
-219.68 cm-1
, as required to confirm the presence of a
TS. This frequency corresponds to the stretching of the
C2 /? Ca and O /? H bonds, supporting the con-
certed character of the mechanism insinuated from the
PES. The optimized structure of the TS is shown in Fig. 9
and the respective Cartesian coordinates are given as sup-
plementary information. In this postulated TS, with the N10
atom deprotonated, the atomic Fukui index on the carbonyl
oxygen of pyruvate reaches the maximum value of 0.27,
compared to the value of 0.24 for the isolated pyruvate
molecule, indicating the increase of its nucleophilic char-
acter as the Ca atom is attacked by the C2 atom of the
ylide, as expected. Figure 10 shows the f-
Fukui function
for the TS. It is observed that the f-
function isosurface, the
red lobe, of the C2 atom is pointing to the Ca of pyruvate,
evidencing that the nucleophilic attack is in progress. On
the other hand, for pyruvate the f-
function of the carbonyl
oxygen is pointing to the proton of the 40
amino group,
denoting the proton transfer from the 40
-amino group is on
the way.
Intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) calculations were
carried out to confirm that the observed TS corresponds to
the reaction of interest. The experiments done in forward
Fig. 7 2-D view of the potential energy surface (PES)
Fig. 8 Optimized structure of
the reactant state
980 J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982
123
and reverse directions led to the expected species, L–ThDP
and R, respectively. The calculated activation barrier for
the product formation results to be 19.3 kcal/mol, in
agreement with reported experimental value of 16.2 kcal/
mol [5]. On the other hand, if the TS is considered to be in
its usual reported APH?
form, i.e., the N10
atom proton-
ated, the activation barrier increases reaching the value of
about 28 kcal/mol. This change in the activation barriers is
caused by differences in stability, in the first case the
negative charge is delocalized in the pyrimidine ring giving
stability to the system, whereas in the second case the
negative charge is lying on the two oxygen atoms of the
carboxylate group solely. In addition, in the present pos-
tulated TS the carbonyl oxygen of pyruvate is in close
proximity to the proton of the 40
-amino group of the thia-
zolium ring, 1.57 A˚ , favoring the transference. Figure 11
shows the optimized structure for the product L–ThDP, it is
observed that it exists in a tautomeric form in which the
N10
atom is deprotonated and the N40
atom is in its imino
form; the respective dihedral angles /T and /P are 108.1
and -61.9. The respective cartesian coordinates are given
as supplementary information. This structure gives a strong
basic character to the 40
-imino group, consequently we
conjecture that it could detach a proton from the environ-
ment to regenerate the 40
-amino group.
Regarding the thermodynamics, the results show that the
proposed reaction is slightly exergonic (DG0
= -2.0 kcal/
mol). However, as many biochemical processes, this reac-
tion is followed by an highly exergonic reaction, the
decarboxylation of the L–ThDP, resulting in a highly
thermodynamic favored process.
Finally, it is necessary, however, to mention that the
definition of other reaction coordinates may alter slightly
the results and the derived conclusions of this study.
Fig. 9 Optimized structure of the transition state
Fig. 10 Nucleophilic character of the transition state as expressed by
the f-
Fukui function (red cloud)
Fig. 11 Optimized structure of the product L–ThDP
Fig. 12 Proposed mechanism for the formation of the intermediate
L–ThDP
J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 981
123
Conclusions
The main conclusions of this study can be summarized as
follows: (1) the reaction leading to the formation of
L–ThDP occurs via a concerted mechanism, i.e., the car-
boligation C2–Ca and the proton transfer from the 40
amino
group to the carbonyl oxygen of the pyruvate molecule
occur simultaneously, (2) during the reaction, the N10
atom
of the pyrimidyl ring is deprotonated, (3) the optimized
structure of L–ThDP shows the N40
atom in its imino form
and the N10
atom deprotonated. In light of the above
results, we propose the mechanism depicted in Fig. 12 for
the formation of the intermediate L–ThDP. Consequently,
it may be concluded that the participation of the pyrimidyl
ring in the APH?
form, in the reaction between pyruvate
and the ylide, is not supported by the quantum chemical
calculations of this study. In closing, we can mention that
these new findings should be valuable for rational design of
novel herbicides and antibacterial drugs, as it was stressed
in a recent paper [7].
Acknowledgments The authors gratefully acknowledge financial
support from Fondecyt, Grant No. 1100064.
References
1. McCourt JA, Duggleby RG (2006) Acetohydroxyacid synthase
and its role in the biosynthetic pathway for branched-chain amino
acids. Amino Acids 31:173–210
2. Paramasivam S, Balakrishnan A, Dmitrenko O, Godert A,
Begley TP, Jordan F, Polenova T (2011) Solid-state NMR and
density functional theory studies of ionization sates of thiamin.
J Phys Chem B 115:730–736
3. Kern D, Kern G, Neef H, Tittmann K, Killenberg-Jabs M, Wikner
C, Schneider G, Hu¨bner G (1997) How thiamin diphosphate is
activated in enzymes? Science 275:67–70
4. Tittmann K, Golbik R, Uhlemann K, Khailova L, Schneider G,
Patel M, Jordan F, Chipman DM, Dugglebly RG, Hu¨bner G
(2003) NMR analysis of covalent intermediates in thiamin
diphosphate enzymes. Biochemistry 42:7885–7891
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MP2 studies on the C2–C2a bond cleavage in thiamin catalysis.
J Mol Catal B Enzym 61:36–38
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acetohydroxyacid synthases. Curr Opin Chem Biol 9:475–481
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determination of fundamental pathways and activation barriers
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8. Xu X, Goddard WA III (2004) The X3LYP extended density
functional for accurate descriptions of nonbond interactions, spin
states, and thermochemical properties. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
101:2673–2677
9. Delgado EJ, Alderete JB, Jan˜a GA (2011) Density-functional
study on the equilibria in the ThDP activation. J Mol Model
17:2735–2739
10. Schrodinger (2010) Jaguar, version 7.7. Schrodinger, LLC, New
York
11. Jordan F, Nemeria NS (2005) Experimental observation of thia-
min diphosphate-bound intermediates on enzymes and mecha-
nistic information derived from these observations. Bioorg Chem
33:190–215
12. Nemeria NS, Chakraborty S, Balakrishnan A, Jordan F (2009)
Reaction mechanisms of thiamin diphosphate enzymes: defining
states of ionization and tautomerization of the cofactor at indi-
vidual steps. FEBS J 276:2432–2446
13. Nemeria N, Chakraborty S, Baykal A, Korotchkina LG,
Patel MS, Jordan F (2007) The 10
,40
-iminopyrimidine tautomer of
thiamin diphosphate is poised for catalysis in asymmetric active
centers on enzymes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 104:78–82
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123

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Computer-assisted study on the reaction between pyruvate and ylide in the pathway leading to lactyl–ThDP

  • 1. Computer-assisted study on the reaction between pyruvate and ylide in the pathway leading to lactyl–ThDP Omar Alvarado • Gonzalo Jan˜a • Eduardo J. Delgado Received: 9 May 2012 / Accepted: 5 July 2012 / Published online: 11 July 2012 Ó Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012 Abstract In this study the formation of the lactyl–thia- min diphosphate intermediate (L–ThDP) is addressed using density functional theory calculations at X3LYP/6- 31??G(d,p) level of theory. The study includes potential energy surface scans, transition state search, and intrinsic reaction coordinate calculations. Reactivity is analyzed in terms of Fukui functions. The results allow to conclude that the reaction leading to the formation of L–ThDP occurs via a concerted mechanism, and during the nucleophilic attack on the pyruvate molecule, the ylide is in its AP form. The calculated activation barrier for the reaction is 19.2 kcal/ mol, in agreement with the experimental reported value. Keywords L–ThDP Á Mechanism Á DFT Á Fukui Á Activation barrier Introduction Thiamin diphosphate (ThDP) is an important coenzyme in a variety of enzymes involved in the decarboxylation of a-keto acids in sugar metabolism. It is composed of two aromatic rings, a 4-aminopyrimidine ring and a thiazolium ring bridged by a methylene group [1, 2]. During the catalysis by ThDP enzymes, the 40 -aminopyrimidine moi- ety can interconvert among four ionization/tautomeric states: the 40 -aminopyrimidine (AP), the N10 -protonated 40 -amino pyrimidium (APH? ), 10 ,40 -iminopyrimidine (IP), and the C2-ionizated ylide (Y1). In all ThDP-dependent enzymes, the catalytic cycle is initiated with the attack of the C2 atom of the ylide on the Ca of a pyruvate molecule to form the lactyl–ThDP (L–ThDP) intermediate, which then undergoes decarboxylation to form the hydroxy- ethylthiamin diphosphate (HEThDP) enamine/carbanion. Then, HEThDP reacts with a second molecule of an a-keto acid to form the intermediate AHA–ThDP, which finally leads to the product release and the ylide recover (Fig. 1). Despite the number of articles published on the catalytic cycle of ThDP-dependent enzymes, still there exist some aspects which remain unknown or controversial [3–6]. Specifically on the L–ThDP intermediate, there are some issues that stay unclear, namely, the protonation states of the N10 and N40 atoms, during the attack of C2 on the Ca of pyruvate, since not all of the ionization/tautomeric forms have been clearly characterized [2]. On the other hand, the manner the reaction occurs, i.e., via a stepwise or concerted mechanism, has not been clearly elucidated and remains as a controversial issue [7]. In this study the formation of the L–ThDP intermediate is addressed using high level density functional theory calculations, X3LYP/6-31??G(d,p). The study includes potential energy surface (PES) scans in order to identify and characterize critical points on it, transition state search, and intrinsic reaction coordinate calculations. Reactivity is analyzed in terms of Fukui functions. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10822-012-9589-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. O. Alvarado Á G. Jan˜a Á E. J. Delgado (&) Computational Biological Chemistry Group (QBC), Faculty of Chemical Sciences, Universidad de Concepcio´n, Concepcio´n, Chile e-mail: edelgado@udec.cl G. Jan˜a Departamento de Ciencias Quı´micas, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Sede Concepcio´n, Universidad Andre´s Bello, Concepcio´n, Chile 123 J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 DOI 10.1007/s10822-012-9589-3
  • 2. Computational methods The quantum chemical calculations were performed con- sidering a reduced system consisting of ThDP, the con- served side chain of glutamic acid interacting with the N10 atom of ThDP, and the pyruvate molecule. In order to simplify the calculations the diphosphate group of ThDP was replaced with –OH, since its primary function is to anchor the cofactor and it is not involved in the catalytic mechanism; and the side chains of the protein were ignored except for the above mentioned glutamic which was replaced by acetic acid. The geometries of all structures were optimized in gas phase using the same level of theory X3LYP/6-31??G(d,p). This functional has been reported to give very good geometries of hydrogen-bonded complex [8, 9]. The PES was explored defining two reaction coordi- nates, namely, the distance C2–Ca, defined between the C2 atom of the pyrimidyl ring of the ylide and the Ca of the pyruvate molecule; and the distance O–H, defined between the carbonyl oxygen atom on Ca, in the pyruvate molecule, and the proton in the 40 -amino group of ThDP (Fig. 2). The first reaction coordinate corresponds to the attack of C2 on the Ca of pyruvate, and the second one corresponds to the proton transfer from the N40 atom to the the carbonyl oxygen of the pyruvate molecule. Critical points on the PES were characterized by vibrational frequency calcula- tions in order to identify local minima or saddle points. Intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) calculations were car- ried out at the same level of theory to confirm the opti- mized transition state geometry. All quantum chemical calculations in this study were carried out using the Jaguar 7.0 suite of programs [10]. Results and discussion Prior to the exploration of the PES, the protonation state of the pyrimidyl ring, upon the attack of the ylide on the pyruvate molecule, was investigated in terms of reactivity as expressed by the Fukui functions. The results show that in the case of the APH? form, the accepted form in liter- ature [11–13], the most important nucleophile centers are the oxygen atoms of the carboxylate group interacting with N10 atom, and not the C2 atom as required for a Fig. 1 Catalytic cycle of ThDP-dependent enzymes Fig. 2 Definition of the reaction coordinates 978 J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 123
  • 3. nucleophilic attack on the Ca atom of the pyruvate mole- cule (Fig. 3). This suggests that the carboxylic group should be protonated, as expected from the values of the physiological pH and the pKa of glutamic acid in the enzymatic ambient. The AP form, instead, shows the C2 atom as the most important nucleophile center, as expected (Fig. 4). The calculated atomic fÀ C2 Fukui index on the C2 atom, for the AP and APH? forms, are 0.26 and 0.00, respectively, corroborating the strong nucleophilic char- acter of the C2 atom in the AP form, versus its negligible nucleophilic tendency in the APH? form. These results suggest that the nucleophilic attack of the C2 atom on the Ca of pyruvate requires the ylide in the AP form, ylide (AP). This finding has not been reported earlier and rep- resent a new approach of the reaction mechanism. On the other hand, the reactivity analysis of the pyruvate molecule shows important reactivity as nucleophile of the oxygen atoms, whereas the Ca atom appears to be an electrophile center (Fig. 5). The respective condensed- to-atom Fukui indices for the Ca and carbonyl oxygen atoms are fþ Ca ¼ 0:50 and fÀ O ¼ 0:24. These complimentary chacteristics between the ylide and pyruvate assure that the reaction be feasible, therefore the exploration of the PES was carried out considering the ylide (AP) form. The PES shows three critical points that are associated to the reactants (R), transition state (TS) and product (L–ThDP) (Figs. 6, 7). The topology of the surface sug- gests that the reaction occurs via a concerted mechanism, i.e., the C2 atom gradually attacks the carbonyl oxygen of Fig. 3 Nucleophilic character of the ylide in its APH? form as expressed by the f- Fukui function (red cloud) Fig. 4 Nucleophilic character of the ylide in its AP form as expressed by the f- Fukui function (red cloud) Fig. 5 Nucleophilic character of the isolated pyruvate molecule as expressed by the f- Fukui function (red cloud) Fig. 6 3-D view of the potential energy surface (PES) J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 979 123
  • 4. pyruvate, while the proton on the N40 atom is gradually transferred to the carbonyl oxygen of pyruvate. The exis- tence of one saddle point is also observed in the reaction pathway. The optimized structure of the reactant state, coordinates *4.5, 3.5 on the PES, is shown in Fig. 8. The dihedral angles /T and /P for the ylide are 98° and –84°, respec- tively. Even though in the ylide (AP) the N10 atom is not protonated, the proton of the carboxylic group is in close proximity, 1.67 A˚ , forming a strong hydrogen bond between them. The TS search was carried out using a quasi-Newton method as implemented in Jaguar. The method searches for the TS nearest to the initial geometry guess. The initial TS geometry was estimated from the location of the observed saddle point on the PES. The search led to a struc- ture having one and only one negative frequency, -219.68 cm-1 , as required to confirm the presence of a TS. This frequency corresponds to the stretching of the C2 /? Ca and O /? H bonds, supporting the con- certed character of the mechanism insinuated from the PES. The optimized structure of the TS is shown in Fig. 9 and the respective Cartesian coordinates are given as sup- plementary information. In this postulated TS, with the N10 atom deprotonated, the atomic Fukui index on the carbonyl oxygen of pyruvate reaches the maximum value of 0.27, compared to the value of 0.24 for the isolated pyruvate molecule, indicating the increase of its nucleophilic char- acter as the Ca atom is attacked by the C2 atom of the ylide, as expected. Figure 10 shows the f- Fukui function for the TS. It is observed that the f- function isosurface, the red lobe, of the C2 atom is pointing to the Ca of pyruvate, evidencing that the nucleophilic attack is in progress. On the other hand, for pyruvate the f- function of the carbonyl oxygen is pointing to the proton of the 40 amino group, denoting the proton transfer from the 40 -amino group is on the way. Intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) calculations were carried out to confirm that the observed TS corresponds to the reaction of interest. The experiments done in forward Fig. 7 2-D view of the potential energy surface (PES) Fig. 8 Optimized structure of the reactant state 980 J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 123
  • 5. and reverse directions led to the expected species, L–ThDP and R, respectively. The calculated activation barrier for the product formation results to be 19.3 kcal/mol, in agreement with reported experimental value of 16.2 kcal/ mol [5]. On the other hand, if the TS is considered to be in its usual reported APH? form, i.e., the N10 atom proton- ated, the activation barrier increases reaching the value of about 28 kcal/mol. This change in the activation barriers is caused by differences in stability, in the first case the negative charge is delocalized in the pyrimidine ring giving stability to the system, whereas in the second case the negative charge is lying on the two oxygen atoms of the carboxylate group solely. In addition, in the present pos- tulated TS the carbonyl oxygen of pyruvate is in close proximity to the proton of the 40 -amino group of the thia- zolium ring, 1.57 A˚ , favoring the transference. Figure 11 shows the optimized structure for the product L–ThDP, it is observed that it exists in a tautomeric form in which the N10 atom is deprotonated and the N40 atom is in its imino form; the respective dihedral angles /T and /P are 108.1 and -61.9. The respective cartesian coordinates are given as supplementary information. This structure gives a strong basic character to the 40 -imino group, consequently we conjecture that it could detach a proton from the environ- ment to regenerate the 40 -amino group. Regarding the thermodynamics, the results show that the proposed reaction is slightly exergonic (DG0 = -2.0 kcal/ mol). However, as many biochemical processes, this reac- tion is followed by an highly exergonic reaction, the decarboxylation of the L–ThDP, resulting in a highly thermodynamic favored process. Finally, it is necessary, however, to mention that the definition of other reaction coordinates may alter slightly the results and the derived conclusions of this study. Fig. 9 Optimized structure of the transition state Fig. 10 Nucleophilic character of the transition state as expressed by the f- Fukui function (red cloud) Fig. 11 Optimized structure of the product L–ThDP Fig. 12 Proposed mechanism for the formation of the intermediate L–ThDP J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 981 123
  • 6. Conclusions The main conclusions of this study can be summarized as follows: (1) the reaction leading to the formation of L–ThDP occurs via a concerted mechanism, i.e., the car- boligation C2–Ca and the proton transfer from the 40 amino group to the carbonyl oxygen of the pyruvate molecule occur simultaneously, (2) during the reaction, the N10 atom of the pyrimidyl ring is deprotonated, (3) the optimized structure of L–ThDP shows the N40 atom in its imino form and the N10 atom deprotonated. In light of the above results, we propose the mechanism depicted in Fig. 12 for the formation of the intermediate L–ThDP. Consequently, it may be concluded that the participation of the pyrimidyl ring in the APH? form, in the reaction between pyruvate and the ylide, is not supported by the quantum chemical calculations of this study. In closing, we can mention that these new findings should be valuable for rational design of novel herbicides and antibacterial drugs, as it was stressed in a recent paper [7]. Acknowledgments The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from Fondecyt, Grant No. 1100064. References 1. McCourt JA, Duggleby RG (2006) Acetohydroxyacid synthase and its role in the biosynthetic pathway for branched-chain amino acids. Amino Acids 31:173–210 2. Paramasivam S, Balakrishnan A, Dmitrenko O, Godert A, Begley TP, Jordan F, Polenova T (2011) Solid-state NMR and density functional theory studies of ionization sates of thiamin. J Phys Chem B 115:730–736 3. Kern D, Kern G, Neef H, Tittmann K, Killenberg-Jabs M, Wikner C, Schneider G, Hu¨bner G (1997) How thiamin diphosphate is activated in enzymes? Science 275:67–70 4. Tittmann K, Golbik R, Uhlemann K, Khailova L, Schneider G, Patel M, Jordan F, Chipman DM, Dugglebly RG, Hu¨bner G (2003) NMR analysis of covalent intermediates in thiamin diphosphate enzymes. Biochemistry 42:7885–7891 5. Friedemann R, Tittmann K, Golbik R, Hu¨bner G (2009) DFT and MP2 studies on the C2–C2a bond cleavage in thiamin catalysis. J Mol Catal B Enzym 61:36–38 6. Chipman DM, Duggleby RG, Tittmann K (2005) Mechanisms of acetohydroxyacid synthases. Curr Opin Chem Biol 9:475–481 7. Xiong Y, Liu J, Yang GF, Zhan CG (2010) Computational determination of fundamental pathways and activation barriers for acetohydroxyacid synthase-catalyzed condensation reactions of a-keto acids. J Comput Chem 31:1592–1602 8. Xu X, Goddard WA III (2004) The X3LYP extended density functional for accurate descriptions of nonbond interactions, spin states, and thermochemical properties. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101:2673–2677 9. Delgado EJ, Alderete JB, Jan˜a GA (2011) Density-functional study on the equilibria in the ThDP activation. J Mol Model 17:2735–2739 10. Schrodinger (2010) Jaguar, version 7.7. Schrodinger, LLC, New York 11. Jordan F, Nemeria NS (2005) Experimental observation of thia- min diphosphate-bound intermediates on enzymes and mecha- nistic information derived from these observations. Bioorg Chem 33:190–215 12. Nemeria NS, Chakraborty S, Balakrishnan A, Jordan F (2009) Reaction mechanisms of thiamin diphosphate enzymes: defining states of ionization and tautomerization of the cofactor at indi- vidual steps. FEBS J 276:2432–2446 13. Nemeria N, Chakraborty S, Baykal A, Korotchkina LG, Patel MS, Jordan F (2007) The 10 ,40 -iminopyrimidine tautomer of thiamin diphosphate is poised for catalysis in asymmetric active centers on enzymes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 104:78–82 982 J Comput Aided Mol Des (2012) 26:977–982 123