Proton transfer to carbon represents a significant catalytic challenge because of the large intrinsic energetic barrier and the frequently unfavorable thermodynamics. Multiple kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) were measured for acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of the enol ether functionality of enolpyruvylshikimate 3-phosphate (EPSP) as a nonenzymatic analog of the EPSP synthase (AroA) reaction. The large solvent deuterium KIE demonstrated that protonating C3 was the rate-limiting step, and the lack of solvent hydron exchange into EPSP demonstrated that protonation was irreversible. The reaction mechanism was stepwise, with C3, the methylene carbon, being protonated to form a discrete oxacarbenium ion intermediate before water attack at the cationic center, that is, an AH(‡)*AN (or AH(‡) + AN) mechanism. The calculated 3-(14)C and 3,3-(2)H2 KIEs varied as a function of the extent of proton transfer at the transition state, as reflected in the C3-H(+) bond order, nC3-H+. The calculated 3-(14)C KIE was a function primarily of C3 coupling with the movement of the transferring proton, as reflected in the reaction coordinate contribution ((light)ν(‡)/(heavy)ν(‡)), rather than of changes in bonding. Coupling was strongest in early and late transition states, where the reaction coordinate frequency was lower. The other calculated (14)C and (18)O KIEs were more sensitive to interactions with counterions and solvation in the model structures than nC3-H+. The KIEs revealed a moderately late transition state with significant oxacarbenium ion character and with a C3-H(+) bond order ≈0.6.
Proton transfer to carbon atoms is a significant catalytic challenge because of the large intrinsic energetic barrier and the frequently unfavorable thermodynamics. The main catalytic challenge for enolpyruvylshikimate 3-phosphate synthase (EPSP synthase, AroA) is protonating the methylene carbon atom of phosphoenolpyruvate, or EPSP, in the reverse reaction. We performed transition state analysis using kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) on AroA-catalyzed EPSP hydrolysis, which also begins with a methylene carbon (C3) protonation, as an analog of AroA's reverse reaction. As part of this analysis, an inorganic phosphate scavenging system was developed to remove phosphate which, though present in microscopic amounts in solution, is ubiquitous. The reaction was stepwise, with irreversible C3 protonation to form an EPSP cation intermediate; that is, an AH(‡)*AN mechanism. The large experimental 3-(14)C KIE, 1.032 ± 0.005, indicated strong coupling of C3 with the motion of the transferring proton. Calculated 3-(14)C KIEs for computational transition state models revealed that the transition state occurs early during C3-H(+) bond formation, with a C3-H(+) bond order of ≈0.24. The observed solvent deuterium KIE, 0.97 ± 0.04, was the lowest observed to date for this type of reaction, but consistent with a very early transition state. The large 2-(14)C KIE reflected an "electrostatic sandwich" formed by Asp313 and Glu341 to stabilize the positive charge at C2. In shifting the transition state earlier than the acid-catalyzed reaction, AroA effected a large Hammond shift, indicating that a significant part of AroA's catalytic strategy is to stabilize the positive charge in the EPSP cation. A computational model containing all the charged amino acid residues in the AroA active site close to the reactive center showed a similar Hammond shift relative to the small transition state models.
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