Crystal structure of ferric-yersiniabactin, a virulence factor of Yersinia pestis

MC Miller, S Parkin, JD Fetherston, RD Perry… - Journal of inorganic …, 2006 - Elsevier
MC Miller, S Parkin, JD Fetherston, RD Perry, E DeMoll
Journal of inorganic biochemistry, 2006Elsevier
Yersiniabactin (Ybt), the siderophore produced by Yersinia pestis, has been crystallized
successfully in the ferric complex form and the crystal structure has been determined. The
crystals are orthorhombic with a space group of P212121 and four distinct molecules per
unit cell with cell dimensions of a= 11.3271 (±0.0003) Å, b= 22.3556 (±0.0006) Å, and c=
39.8991 (±0.0011) Å. The crystal structure of ferric Ybt shows that the ferric ion is
coordinated as a 1: 1 complex by three nitrogen electron pairs and three negatively charged …
Yersiniabactin (Ybt), the siderophore produced by Yersinia pestis, has been crystallized successfully in the ferric complex form and the crystal structure has been determined. The crystals are orthorhombic with a space group of P212121 and four distinct molecules per unit cell with cell dimensions of a=11.3271(±0.0003)Å, b=22.3556(±0.0006)Å, and c=39.8991(±0.0011)Å. The crystal structure of ferric Ybt shows that the ferric ion is coordinated as a 1:1 complex by three nitrogen electron pairs and three negatively charged oxygen atoms with a distorted octahedral coordination. The molecule displays a Δ absolute configuration with chiral centers at N2, C9, C10, C12, C13, and C19 in R, R, R, R, S, S configurations, respectively. Few of the crystal structures of siderophores have been solved, and those which have been are of simple hydroxamate and catechol types such as ferrioxamine B and agrobactin. To our knowledge this is the first report of the ferric crystal structure of 5-member heterocycle siderophore.
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