A. Jalila Simaan
Aix-Marseille University
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Featured researches published by A. Jalila Simaan.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Raffaello Papadakis; Eric Rivière; Michel Giorgi; Hélène Jamet; Pierre Rousselot-Pailley; Marius Réglier; A. Jalila Simaan; Thierry Tron
A novel tetranuclear copper(II) complex (1) was synthesized from the self-assembly of copper(II) perchlorate and the ligand N-benzyl-1-(2-pyridyl)methaneimine (L(1)). Single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies revealed that complex 1 consists of a Cu4(OH)4 cubane core, where the four copper(II) centers are linked by μ3-hydroxo bridges. Each copper(II) ion is in a distorted square-pyramidal geometry. X-ray analysis also evidenced an unusual metal cation-π interaction between the copper ions and phenyl substituents of the ligand. Calculations based on the density functional theory method were used to quantify the strength of this metal-π interaction, which appears as an important stabilizing parameter of the cubane core, possibly acting as a driving parameter in the self-aggregation process. In contrast, using the ligand N-phenethyl-1-(2-pyridyl)methaneimine (L(2)), which only differs from L(1) by one methylene group, the same synthetic procedure led to a binuclear bis(μ-hydroxo)copper(II) complex (2) displaying intermolecular π-π interactions or, by a slight variation of the experimental conditions, to a mononuclear complex (3). These complexes were studied by X-ray diffraction techniques. The magnetic properties of complexes 1 and 2 are reported and discussed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Theodore Lazarides; Igor V. Sazanovich; A. Jalila Simaan; Maria Chrisanthi Kafentzi; Milan Delor; Yasmina Mekmouche; Bruno Faure; Marius Réglier; Julia A. Weinstein; Athanassios G. Coutsolelos; Thierry Tron
Several recent studies have shown that the combination of photosensitizers with metalloenzymes can support a light-driven multielectron reduction of molecules such as CO(2) or HCN. Here we show that the association of the zinc tetramethylpyridinium porphyrin (ZnTMPyP(4+)) photosensitizer with the multicopper oxidase (MCO) laccase allows to link the oxidation of an organic molecule to the four electrons reduction of dioxygen into water. The enzyme is photoreduced within minutes with porphyrin/enzyme ratio as low as 1:40. With a 1:1 ratio, the dioxygen consumption rate is 1.7 μmol L(-1) s(-1). Flash photolysis experiments support the formation of the triplet excited state of ZnTMPyP(4+) which reduces the enzyme to form a radical cation of the porphyrin with a k(ET) ≈ 10(7) s(-1) M(-1). The long-lived triplet excited state of the ZnTMPyP(4+) (τ(0) = 0.72 ms) accounts for a substantial electron-transfer quantum yield, φ(ET) = 0.35. Consequently, the enzyme-dependent photo-oxidation of the electron donor occurs with a turnover of 8 min(-1) for the one-electron oxidation process, thereby supporting the suitability of such enzyme/sensitizer hybrid systems for aerobic photodriven transformations on substrates. This study is the first example of a phorphyrin-sensitized four-electron reduction of an enzyme of the MCO family, leading to photoreduction of dioxygen into water.
Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2012
Lydie Brisson; Nadia El Bakkali-Taheri; Michel Giorgi; Antoine Fadel; József Kaizer; Marius Réglier; Thierry Tron; El Hassan Ajandouz; A. Jalila Simaan
Abstract1-Aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid oxidase (ACCO) is a nonheme Fe(II)-containing enzyme that is related to the 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase family. The binding of substrates/cofactors to tomato ACCO was investigated through kinetics, tryptophan fluorescence quenching, and modeling studies. α-Aminophosphonate analogs of the substrate (1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid, ACC), 1-aminocyclopropane-1-phosphonic acid (ACP) and (1-amino-1-methyl)ethylphosphonic acid (AMEP), were found to be competitive inhibitors versus both ACC and bicarbonate (HCO3−) ions. The measured dissociation constants for Fe(II) and ACC clearly indicate that bicarbonate ions improve both Fe(II) and ACC binding, strongly suggesting a stabilization role for this cofactor. A structural model of tomato ACCO was constructed and used for docking experiments, providing a model of possible interactions of ACC, HCO3−, and ascorbate at the active site. In this model, the ACC and bicarbonate binding sites are located close together in the active pocket. HCO3− is found at hydrogen-bond distance from ACC and interacts (hydrogen bonds or electrostatic interactions) with residues K158, R244, Y162, S246, and R300 of the enzyme. The position of ascorbate is also predicted away from ACC. Individually docked at the active site, the inhibitors ACP and AMEP were found coordinating the metal ion in place of ACC with the phosphonate groups interacting with K158 and R300, thus interlocking with both ACC and bicarbonate binding sites. In conclusion, HCO3− and ACC together occupy positions similar to the position of 2-oxoglutarate in related enzymes, and through a hydrogen bond HCO3− likely plays a major role in the stabilization of the substrate in the active pocket.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2009
Eugénie Peyroux; Wadih Ghattas; Renaud Hardré; Michel Giorgi; Bruno Faure; A. Jalila Simaan; Catherine Belle; Marius Réglier
2-Hydroxypyridine-N-oxide (HOPNO) is described as a new and efficient transition-state analog (TS-analog) inhibitor for the mushroom tyrosinase with an IC(50) = 1.16 microM and a K(I) = 1.8 microM. Using the binuclear copper(II) complex [Cu(2)(BPMP)(mu-OH)](ClO(4))(2) (2) known as a functional model for the tyrosinase catecholase activity, we isolated and fully characterized a 1:1 (2)/OPNO adduct in which the HOPNO is deprotonated and chelates only one Cu-atom of the binuclear site in a bidentate mode. On the basis of these results, a structural model for the tyrosinase inhibition by HOPNO is proposed.
Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2014
Yasmina Mekmouche; Simeng Zhou; Angela M. Cusano; Eric Record; Anne Lomascolo; Viviane Robert; A. Jalila Simaan; Pierre Rousselot-Pailley; Sana Ullah; Florence Chaspoul; Thierry Tron
We report on the expression in Aspergillus niger of a laccase gene we used to produce variants in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Grams of recombinant enzyme can be easily obtained. This highlights the potential of combining this generic laccase sequence to the yeast and fungal expression systems for large-scale productions of variants.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011
A. Jalila Simaan; Yasmina Mekmouche; Christian Herrero; Pierre Moreno; Ally Aukauloo; Jacques A. Delaire; Marius Réglier; Thierry Tron
By mimicking the naturally evolved enzymatic and photochemical processes of photosynthesis, solar energy can be used to drive catalysis and ultimately convert light to stored chemical energy. The target is to develop robust systems in which light absorption triggers electron-transfer events that subsequently lead to the activation of a catalytic center. Such a process would not only avoid chemical activation by harsh oxidants or reductants, one particular focus of green chemistry, but also diminish the dependence on nonrenewable energy sources. In addition to these now well-established goals of sustainable energy and resource use, the development of photodriven catalysts potentially offers new avenues for the study of catalytic mechanisms. In this field Gray, Winkler, and co-workers pioneered the coupling of photoactive units to enzymes to access the buried active site of different metalloenzymes. The well-documented Ru-polypyridine-type complexes have been used to initiate electron-transfer reactions in the presence of either sacrificial electron acceptors or electron donors for the oxidation or reduction of active sites. One challenging issue when using this strategy to activate metalloenzymes, is the efficient accumulation of multicharges or holes at the catalytic unit. In the majority of cases light-induced transfer processes have been limited to one electron transfer. Only a few examples of multicharge or hole accumulations have been reported recently. Some rare examples using metalloproteins that could lead to photodriven catalytic activities were also reported. Herein, we report the light-driven four-electron reduction of a laccase (our previously studied LAC3 from Trametes sp. C30), which ultimately converts dioxygen into water by using ruthenium(II) polypyridine-type chromophores (complexes 1 and 2, Scheme 1) and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) as the sacrificial electron donor.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2016
Dóra Lakk-Bogáth; Róbert Csonka; Gábor Speier; Marius Réglier; A. Jalila Simaan; Jean-Valère Naubron; Michel Giorgi; K. Lázár; József Kaizer
The chiral pentadentate low-spin (S = 1) oxoiron(IV) complex [FeIV(O)(asN4Py)]2+ (2) was synthesized and spectroscopically characterized. Its formation kinetics, reactivity, and (enantio)selectivity in an oxygen-atom-transfer reaction was investigated in detail and compared to a similar pentadentate ligand-containing system.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2009
Wadih Ghattas; Zeinab Serhan; Nadia El Bakkali-Taheri; Marius Réglier; Masahito Kodera; Yutaka Hitomi; A. Jalila Simaan
A mu-oxo-diiron(III) complex bridged by two molecules of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACCH) was prepared with the ligand 1,4,7-triazacyclononane (TACN): [(TACN)Fe(2)(mu-O)(mu-ACCH)(2)](ClO(4))(4) x 2 H(2)O (1). This complex was characterized, and its crystal structure was solved. The bridging amino acid moieties were found in their zwitterionic forms (noted as ACCH). Reactivity assays were performed in the presence of hydrogen peroxide, and 1 turned out to be the first example of a well-characterized iron-ACCH complex able to produce ethylene from the bound ACCH moiety. The reaction requires the presence of a few equivalents of base, probably involved in the deprotonation of the amine groups of the ACCH bridges.
Chemsuschem | 2015
Ludovic Schneider; Yasmina Mekmouche; Pierre Rousselot-Pailley; A. Jalila Simaan; Viviane Robert; Marius Réglier; Ally Aukauloo; Thierry Tron
Oxidation reactions are highly important chemical transformations that still require harsh reaction conditions and stoichiometric amounts of chemical oxidants that are often toxic. To circumvent these issues, olefins oxidation is achieved in mild conditions upon irradiation of an aqueous solution of the complex [Ru(bpy)3 ](2+) and the enzyme laccase. Epoxide formation is coupled to the light-driven reduction of O2 by [Ru(bpy)3 ](2+) /laccase system. The reactivity can be explained by dioxygen acting both as an oxidative agent and as renewable electron acceptor, avoiding the use of a sacrificial electron acceptor.
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
Madleen Sallmann; Fabio Oldenburg; Beatrice Braun; Marius Réglier; A. Jalila Simaan; Christian Limberg
The hitherto most realistic low-molecular-weight analogue for the 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid oxidase (ACCO) is reported. The ACCOs 2-His-1-carboxylate iron(II) active site was mimicked by a TpFe moiety, to which the natural substrate ACC could be bound. The resulting complex [Tp(Me,Ph) FeACC] (1), according to X-ray diffraction analysis performed for the nickel analogue, represents an excellent structural model, featuring ACC coordinated in a bidentate fashion-as proposed for the enzymatic substrate complex-as well as a vacant coordination site that forms the basis for the first successful replication also of the ACCO function: 1 is the first known ACC complex that reacts with O2 to produce ethylene. As a FeOOH species had been suggested as intermediate in the catalytic cycle, H2 O2 was tested as the oxidant, too, and indeed evolution of ethylene proceeded even more rapidly to give 65 % yield.