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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Isotopic (18O) shift in 31P nuclear magnetic resonance applied to a study of enzyme-catalyzed phosphate--phosphate exchange and phosphate (oxygen)--water exchange reactions.

Mildred Cohn, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1978 - 
- Vol. 75, Iss: 1, pp 200-203
TLDR
An isotopic shift of the (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance due to (18)O bonded to phosphorus of 0.0206 ppm has been observed in inorganic orthophosphate and adenine nucleotides, proving that bond cleavage occurs between the alpha P and the alpha-beta bridge oxygen.
Abstract
An isotopic shift of the 31P nuclear magnetic resonance due to 18O bonded to phosphorus of 0.0206 ppm has been observed in inorganic orthophosphate and adenine nucleotides. Thus, the separation between the resonances of 31P18O4 and 31P16O4 at 145.7 MHz is 12 Hz and, in a randomized sample containing ∼50% 18O, all five 16O-18O species are resolved and separated from each other by 3 Hz. Not only does this yield the 18O/16O ratio of the phosphate but, more important, the 18O-labeled phosphate in effect can serve as a double label in following phosphate reactions, for oxygen in all cases and for phosphorus, provided the oxygen does not exchange with solvent water. Thus, it becomes possible to follow labeled phosphorus or labeled oxygen continuously as reactions proceed. Rate studies involving (i) phosphorus and (ii) oxygen are illustrated by continuous monitoring of the exchange reactions between (i) the β phosphate of ADP and inorganic phosphate catalyzed by polynucleotide phosphorylase and (ii) inorganic orthophosphate and water catalyzed by yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase. In the ADP—Pi exchange, the Pi (18O4) yielded an α P(16O318O) and a β P(18O4), proving that bond cleavage occurs between the α P and the α-β bridge oxygen. Among the many additional potential uses of this labeling technique and its spectroscopic observation are: (i) different labeling of each phosphate group of ATP, (ii) to follow rate of transfer of 18O from a nonphosphate compound such as a carboxylic acid to a phosphate compound, and (iii) to follow the rate of scrambling (for example, of the β-γ bridge oxygen of ATP to nonbridge β P positions) and simultaneously the rate of exchange of the γ P nonbridge oxygens with solvent water in various ATPase reactions.

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Book ChapterDOI

Mechanism and Catalysis of Nucleophilic Substitution in Phosphate Esters

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the various mechanism and catalysis of nucleophilic substitution in phosphate esters and the means by which catalysis can be achieved in the absence of enzymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isotope effects in nuclear shielding

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss basic trends of intrinsic isotope effects, such as additivity solvent effects, temperature effects, steric effects, substituent effects, and hyperconjugation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bond order and charge localization in nucleoside phosphorothioates

PA Frey, +1 more
- 03 May 1985 - 
TL;DR: Bond lengths obtained from x-ray crystallographic data and electron diffraction, the magnitudes of the effects of 18O on the 31P-nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shifts of phosphorus in nucleoside [18O]phosphorothioates, the pH-dependence of 17O-NMR chemical shifts in [17O]thiophosphate and
Journal ArticleDOI

Ribozyme-catalyzed and nonenzymatic reactions of phosphate diesters: rate effects upon substitution of sulfur for a nonbridging phosphoryl oxygen atom.

TL;DR: It is confirmed that thio substitution has no effect on the nonenzymatic alkaline cleavage of RNA and the strong preference of Mg2+ for binding to oxygen rather than sulfur suggest that the pro-RP oxygen atom is not coordinated to Mg 2+ in the E.S complex or in the transition state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism and stereochemical course at phosphorus of the reaction catalyzed by a bacterial phosphotriesterase.

TL;DR: Results have been interpreted as an indication of a single in-line displacement by an activated water molecule directly at the phosphorus center of the phosphotriester substrate.
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