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<h1 class="box-heading">Description</h1> | <h1 class="box-heading">Description</h1> | ||
<p>Siderophores are small, high-affinity iron chelating agents, and many microorganisms have the ability to secrete them for the acquisition of iron under iron deficiency conditions (because the iron is solid in the general natural environment with very low concentration of iron ions) and transport through membrane transporter. Siderophore is one of the strongest soluble ferric chelators known in the world. The structure and properties of siderophore produced by different organisms vary widely. The types include: catechins, hydroxamates and carboxylates. | <p>Siderophores are small, high-affinity iron chelating agents, and many microorganisms have the ability to secrete them for the acquisition of iron under iron deficiency conditions (because the iron is solid in the general natural environment with very low concentration of iron ions) and transport through membrane transporter. Siderophore is one of the strongest soluble ferric chelators known in the world. The structure and properties of siderophore produced by different organisms vary widely. The types include: catechins, hydroxamates and carboxylates. | ||
− | Belonging to catechins, enterobactin is the strongest siderophore known, binding to the Fe<sup>3+</sup> with high affinity (K= | + | Belonging to catechins, enterobactin is the strongest siderophore known, binding to the Fe<sup>3+</sup> with high affinity (K=10<sup>52</sup> M), so we will develop our project based on the siderophore system of <i>E. coli</i>. |
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<p>1. Ward, Thomas R.; Andreas Lutz; Serge P. Parel; Jurgen Eusling; Philipp Gutlich; Peter Buglyo & Chris Orvig (1999). "An Iron-Based Molecular Redox Switch as a Model for Iron Release From Enterobactin Via the Salicylate Binding Mode". Inorg. Chem. 38 (22): 5007–5017. </p> | <p>1. Ward, Thomas R.; Andreas Lutz; Serge P. Parel; Jurgen Eusling; Philipp Gutlich; Peter Buglyo & Chris Orvig (1999). "An Iron-Based Molecular Redox Switch as a Model for Iron Release From Enterobactin Via the Salicylate Binding Mode". Inorg. Chem. 38 (22): 5007–5017. </p> | ||
<p>2. Lee, Chi Woo; Ecker, David J.; Raymond, Kenneth N. (1985). "Coordination chemistry of microbial iron transport compounds. 34. The pH-dependent reduction of ferric enterobactin probed by electrochemical methods and its implications for microbial iron transport". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107 (24): 6920- 6923. </p> | <p>2. Lee, Chi Woo; Ecker, David J.; Raymond, Kenneth N. (1985). "Coordination chemistry of microbial iron transport compounds. 34. The pH-dependent reduction of ferric enterobactin probed by electrochemical methods and its implications for microbial iron transport". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107 (24): 6920- 6923. </p> | ||
− | <p>3. J.R. Pollack, J.B. Neilands, Enterobactin (12 March 1970). "an iron transport compound from Salmonella typhimurium". Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 38 (5): 989–992. </p> | + | <p>3. J.R. Pollack, J.B. Neilands, Enterobactin (12 March 1970). "an iron transport compound from <i>Salmonella typhimurium</i>". Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 38 (5): 989–992. </p> |
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Revision as of 01:03, 18 October 2018