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Metallohydrolase biomimetics with catalytic and structural flexibility.

The structural and functional properties of zinc(ii) complexes of two nitrogen rich polydentate ligands, HTPDP = 1,3-bis(bis-pyridin-2-ylmethylamino)propan-2-ol and HTPPNOL = N,N,N'-tris-(2-pyridylmethyl)-1,3-diaminopropan-2-ol, are compared. HTPDP is a hepta-dentate ligand with four pyridyl groups attached to a 1,3-diaminopropan-2-ol backbone while HTPPNOL contains only three pyridyl groups. In reactions with Zn(ClO4 )2 , HTPDP forms a dinuclear zinc compound [Zn2 (TPDP)(OAc)](ClO4 )2 , 1. On the other hand, mononuclear [Zn(HTPPNOL)](ClO4 )2 , 2, and tetranuclear [Zn4 (TPPNOL)2 (OAc)3 ](ClO4 )3 , 3, complexes were isolated with the ligand HTPPNOL. Kinetic measurements with the substrate bis(2,4-dinitrophenyl)phosphate (BDNPP) revealed that compound 1 (kcat = 31.4 × 10-3 min-1 ) is more reactive than 3 (kcat = 7.7 × 10-3 min-1 ) at pH = 8.5, whilst the mononuclear compound 2 is inactive. Compound 1 displays a typical steady-state kinetic behaviour, while compound 3 exhibits steady-state behaviour only ∼120 s after starting the reaction, preceded by a burst-phase.31 P NMR studies confirm that 1 can promote the hydrolysis of both ester bonds in BDNPP, generating the monoester DNPP and inorganic phosphate in the process. In contrast, DNPP is not a substrate for 3. The crystal structure of the complex formed by 3 and DNPP reveals the formation of a tetranuclear zinc complex [Zn4 (TPPNOL)2 (DNPP)2 ](ClO4 )2 , 4, in which the phosphate moiety of DNPP adopts an unusual tridentate μ-η1 :η1 :η1 coordination mode.

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