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Dive into the research topics where Claudio Greco is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudio Greco.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Lewis Acid Trapping of an Elusive Copper–Tosylnitrene Intermediate Using Scandium Triflate

Subrata Kundu; Enrico Miceli; Erik R. Farquhar; Florian Felix Pfaff; Uwe Kuhlmann; Peter Hildebrandt; Beatrice Braun; Claudio Greco; Kallol Ray

High-valent copper-nitrene intermediates have long been proposed to play a role in copper-catalyzed aziridination and amination reactions. However, such intermediates have eluded detection for decades, preventing the unambiguous assignments of mechanisms. Moreover, the electronic structure of the proposed copper-nitrene intermediates has also been controversially discussed in the literature. These mechanistic questions and controversy have provided tremendous motivation to probe the accessibility and reactivity of Cu(III)-NR/Cu(II)N(•)R species. In this paper, we report a breakthrough in this field that was achieved by trapping a transient copper-tosylnitrene species, 3-Sc, in the presence of scandium triflate. The sufficient stability of 3-Sc at -90 °C enabled its characterization with optical, resonance Raman, NMR, and X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopies, which helped to establish its electronic structure as Cu(II)N(•)Ts (Ts = tosyl group) and not Cu(III)NTs. 3-Sc can initiate tosylamination of cyclohexane, thereby suggesting Cu(II)N(•)Ts cores as viable reactants in oxidation catalysis.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Quantum refinement of [FeFe] hydrogenase indicates a dithiomethylamine ligand.

Ulf Ryde; Claudio Greco; Luca De Gioia

The active site of the [FeFe] hydrogenases contains two Fe ions bound to one Cys ligand, three CO molecules, two CN(-) ions, and a dithiolate ligand. The nature of the last of these has been much discussed, and it has been suggested that it contains C, N, or O as the bridgehead atom. Most experimental studies indicate a N atom, whereas a recent density functional theory (DFT) study of a crystal structure indicated an O atom. Here, we performed quantum refinement on the same crystal structure with five different models of the dithiolate ligand X(CH(2)S(-))(2), with X = CH(2), NH(2)(+), NH (two conformations), or O; we found that structures with a N bridgehead atom actually provide the best fit to the raw crystallographic data. Quantum refinement is standard crystallographic refinement in which the molecular mechanics force field normally used to supplement the experimental raw data to give a more chemical structure is replaced by more accurate DFT calculations for the active site. Thereby, we obtain structures that are an ideal compromise between DFT and crystallography.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Influence of the [2Fe]H Subcluster Environment on the Properties of Key Intermediates in the Catalytic Cycle of [FeFe] Hydrogenases: Hints for the Rational Design of Synthetic Catalysts†

Maurizio Bruschi; Claudio Greco; Markus Kaukonen; Piercarlo Fantucci; Ulf Ryde; Luca De Gioia

Natures recipe: A theoretical study analyzes how the environment of the [FeFe] hydrogenases catalytic cofactor affects its chemical properties, particularly the relative stability of complexes with bridging and terminal hydride ligands (see picture; Fe teal, S yellow, C green, N blue, O red, H gray). The results help to elucidate key rules for the design of bioinspired synthetic catalysts for H(2) production.


Nature Chemistry | 2014

The oxidative inactivation of FeFe hydrogenase reveals the flexibility of the H-cluster

Vincent Fourmond; Claudio Greco; Kateryna Sybirna; Carole Baffert; Po-hung Wang; Pierre Ezanno; Marco Montefiori; Maurizio Bruschi; Isabelle Meynial-Salles; Philippe Soucaille; Jochen Blumberger; Hervé Bottin; Luca De Gioia; Christophe Léger

Nature is a valuable source of inspiration in the design of catalysts, and various approaches are used to elucidate the mechanism of hydrogenases, the enzymes that oxidize or produce H2. In FeFe hydrogenases, H2 oxidation occurs at the H-cluster, and catalysis involves H2 binding on the vacant coordination site of an iron centre. Here, we show that the reversible oxidative inactivation of this enzyme results from the binding of H2 to coordination positions that are normally blocked by intrinsic CO ligands. This flexibility of the coordination sphere around the reactive iron centre confers on the enzyme the ability to avoid harmful reactions under oxidizing conditions, including exposure to O2. The versatile chemistry of the diiron cluster in the natural system might inspire the design of novel synthetic catalysts for H2 oxidation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Investigations on the Role of Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer in Hydrogen Activation by [FeFe]-Hydrogenase

David W. Mulder; Michael W. Ratzloff; Maurizio Bruschi; Claudio Greco; Evangeline Koonce; John W. Peters; Paul W. King

Proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) is a fundamental process at the core of oxidation-reduction reactions for energy conversion. The [FeFe]-hydrogenases catalyze the reversible activation of molecular H2 through a unique metallocofactor, the H-cluster, which is finely tuned by the surrounding protein environment to undergo fast PCET transitions. The correlation of electronic and structural transitions at the H-cluster with proton-transfer (PT) steps has not been well-resolved experimentally. Here, we explore how modification of the conserved PT network via a Cys → Ser substitution at position 169 proximal to the H-cluster of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii [FeFe]-hydrogenase (CrHydA1) affects the H-cluster using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Despite a substantial decrease in catalytic activity, the EPR and FTIR spectra reveal different H-cluster catalytic states under reducing and oxidizing conditions. Under H2 or sodium dithionite reductive treatments, the EPR spectra show signals that are consistent with a reduced [4Fe-4S]H(+) subcluster. The FTIR spectra showed upshifts of νCO modes to energies that are consistent with an increase in oxidation state of the [2Fe]H subcluster, which was corroborated by DFT analysis. In contrast to the case for wild-type CrHydA1, spectra associated with Hred and Hsred states are less populated in the Cys → Ser variant, demonstrating that the exchange of -SH with -OH alters how the H-cluster equilibrates among different reduced states of the catalytic cycle under steady-state conditions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

CO Disrupts the Reduced H-Cluster of FeFe Hydrogenase. A Combined DFT and Protein Film Voltammetry Study

Carole Baffert; Luca Bertini; Thomas Lautier; Claudio Greco; Kateryna Sybirna; Pierre Ezanno; Emilien Etienne; Philippe Soucaille; Patrick Bertrand; Hervé Bottin; Isabelle Meynial-Salles; Luca De Gioia; Christophe Léger

Carbon monoxide is often described as a competitive inhibitor of FeFe hydrogenases, and it is used for probing H(2) binding to synthetic or in silico models of the active site H-cluster. Yet it does not always behave as a simple inhibitor. Using an original approach which combines accurate electrochemical measurements and theoretical calculations, we elucidate the mechanism by which, under certain conditions, CO binding can cause permanent damage to the H-cluster. Like in the case of oxygen inhibition, the reaction with CO engages the entire H-cluster, rather than only the Fe(2) subsite.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Targeting Intermediates of [FeFe]-Hydrogenase by CO and CN Vibrational Signatures

Lian Yu; Claudio Greco; Maurizio Bruschi; Ulf Ryde; Luca De Gioia; Markus Reiheet

In this work, we employ density functional theory to assign vibrational signatures of [FeFe]-hydrogenase intermediates to molecular structures. For this purpose, we perform an exhaustive analysis of structures and harmonic vibrations of a series of CN and CO containing model clusters of the [FeFe]-hydrogenase enzyme active site considering also different charges, counterions, and solvents. The pure density functional BP86 in combination with a triple-ζ polarized basis set produce reliable molecular structures as well as harmonic vibrations. Calculated CN and CO stretching vibrations are analyzed separately. Scaled vibrational frequencies are then applied to assign intermediates in [FeFe]-hydrogenases reaction cycle. The results nicely complement the previous studies of Darensbourg and Hall, and Zilberman et al. The infrared spectrum of the H(ox) form is in very good agreement with the calculated spectrum of the Fe(I)Fe(II) model complex featuring a free coordination site at the distal Fe atom, as well as, with the calculated spectra of the complexes in which H(2) or H(2)O are coordinated at this site. The spectrum of H(red) measured from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans is compatible with a mixture of a Fe(I)Fe(I) species with all terminal COs, and a Fe(I)Fe(I) species with protonated dtma ligand, while the spectrum of H(red) recently measured from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is compatible with a mixture of a Fe(I)Fe(I) species with a bridged CO, and a Fe(II)Fe(II) species with a terminal hydride bound to the Fe atom.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013

New FeI–FeI Complex Featuring a Rotated Conformation Related to the [2 Fe]H Subsite of [Fe–Fe] Hydrogenase

Sabrina Munery; Jean-François Capon; Luca De Gioia; Catherine Elleouet; Claudio Greco; François Y. Pétillon; Philippe Schollhammer; Jean Talarmin; Giuseppe Zampella

Rotated geometry: The first example of a dinuclear iron(I)-iron(I) complex featuring a fully rotated geometry related to the active site of [Fe-Fe] hydrogenase is reported.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Functionally relevant interplay between the Fe(4)S(4) cluster and CN(-) ligands in the active site of [FeFe]-hydrogenases.

Maurizio Bruschi; Claudio Greco; Luca Bertini; Piercarlo Fantucci; Ulf Ryde; Luca De Gioia

[FeFe]-hydrogenases are highly efficient H(2)-evolving metalloenzymes that include cyanides and carbonyls in the active site. The latter is an Fe(6)S(6) cluster (the so-called H-cluster) that can be subdivided into a binuclear portion carrying the CO and CN(-) groups and a tetranuclear subcluster. The fundamental role of cyanide ligands in increasing the basicity of the H-cluster has been highlighted previously. Here a more subtle but crucial role played by the two CN(-) ligands in the active site of [FeFe]-hydrogenases is disclosed. In fact, QM/MM calculations on all-atom models of the enzyme from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans show that the cyanide groups fine-tune the electronic and redox properties of the active site, affecting both the protonation regiochemistry and electron transfer between the two subclusters of the H-cluster. Despite the crucial role of cyanides in the protein active site, the currently available bioinspired electrocatalysts generally lack CN(-) groups in order to avoid competition between the latter and the catalytic metal centers for proton binding. In this respect, we show that a targeted inclusion of phosphine ligands in hexanuclear biomimetic clusters may restore the electronic and redox features of the wild-type H-cluster.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Optical and structural properties of copper-oxytocin dications in the gas phase.

Laure Joly; Rodolphe Antoine; Florian Albrieux; Renaud Ballivian; M. Broyer; Fabien Chirot; Jérôme Lemoine; Philippe Dugourd; Claudio Greco; Roland Mitrić; Vlasta Bonacic-Koutecky

We present a joint experimental and theoretical investigation of the structural and optical properties of copper-oxytocin dications in the gas phase. Ion mobility and UV photodissociation experiments were performed, allowing the investigation of the influence of the Cu(2+) ion on the structural and optical properties of oxytocin. Density functional theory calculations were performed to find low energy structures for the bare and complexed peptide and to characterize optical spectral features. Copper complexation induces a drastic change in the structure of the oxytocin peptide. In particular, we predict a 4N chelation of the copper cation which leads to a contraction of the oxytocin ring. The gas phase lowest-energy structures are compared with the X-ray crystal structure of the oxytocin molecule bound to its receptor protein. The optical spectrum of oxytocin complexed with the copper cation displays a global enhancement of the photofragmentation yield as compared to the one recorded for the doubly protonated oxytocin. Moreover, experimental and calculated optical spectra of protonated tyrosine have also been determined, since its leading features are present in oxytocin as well.

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Luca De Gioia

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Piercarlo Fantucci

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Giuseppe Zampella

University of Milano-Bicocca

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L Bertini

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Giorgio Moro

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Ugo Cosentino

University of Milano-Bicocca

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