Why Do Divalent Metal Ions Either Promote or Inhibit Enzymatic Reactions?

  • Mordasini T
  • Curioni A
  • Andreoni W
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Abstract

Divalent metal ions are essential to many enzymatic reactions involving nucleic acids, but their critical and specific role still needs to be uncovered. Restriction endonucleases are a prominent group of such metal-requiring enzymes. Large scale accurate simulations of Mg- and Ca-BamHI elucidate the mechanism of the catalytic reaction leading to DNA cleavage and show that it involves the concerted action of two metal ions and water molecules. It is also established that what is decisive for the dramatically different behavior of magnesium (a cocatalyst) and calcium (an inhibitor) are kinetic factors and not the properties of the prereactive states of the enzymes. A new perspective is opened for the understanding of the functional role of metal ions in biological processes.

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Mordasini, T., Curioni, A., & Andreoni, W. (2003). Why Do Divalent Metal Ions Either Promote or Inhibit Enzymatic Reactions? Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(7), 4381–4384. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.c200664200

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