Enterobactin

Enterobactin (also known as enterochelin) is a high affinity siderophore that acquires iron for microbial systems. It is primarily found in Gram-negative bacteria, such as Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium.

Enterobactin
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
N,N′,N′′-[(3S,7S,11S)-2,6,10-Trioxo-1,5,9-trioxacyclododecane-3,7,11-triyl]tris(2,3-dihydroxybenzamide)
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
ChEBI
ChEMBL
ChemSpider
PubChem CID
UNII
  • InChI=1S/C30H27N3O15/c34-19-7-1-4-13(22(19)37)25(40)31-16-10-46-29(44)18(33-27(42)15-6-3-9-21(36)24(15)39)12-48-30(45)17(11-47-28(16)43)32-26(41)14-5-2-8-20(35)23(14)38/h1-9,16-18,34-39H,10-12H2,(H,31,40)(H,32,41)(H,33,42)/t16-,17-,18-/m0/s1 Y
    Key: SERBHKJMVBATSJ-BZSNNMDCSA-N Y
  • InChI=1/C30H27N3O15/c34-19-7-1-4-13(22(19)37)25(40)31-16-10-46-29(44)18(33-27(42)15-6-3-9-21(36)24(15)39)12-48-30(45)17(11-47-28(16)43)32-26(41)14-5-2-8-20(35)23(14)38/h1-9,16-18,34-39H,10-12H2,(H,31,40)(H,32,41)(H,33,42)/t16-,17-,18-/m0/s1
    Key: SERBHKJMVBATSJ-BZSNNMDCBT
SMILES
  • C1C(C(=O)OCC(C(=O)OCC(C(=O)O1)NC(=O)C2=C(C(=CC=C2)O)O)NC(=O)C3=C(C(=CC=C3)O)O)NC(=O)C4=C(C(=CC=C4)O)O
  • c1cc(c(c(c1)O)O)C(=O)N[C@H]2COC(=O)[C@H](COC(=O)[C@H](COC2=O)NC(=O)c3cccc(c3O)O)NC(=O)c4cccc(c4O)O
Properties
C30H27N3O15
Molar mass 669.55 g/mol
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Y verify (what is YN ?)
Infobox references

Enterobactin is the strongest siderophore known, binding to the ferric ion (Fe3+) with affinity K = 1052 M−1. This value is substantially larger than even some synthetic metal chelators, such as EDTA (Kf,Fe3+ ~ 1025 M−1). Due to its high affinity, enterobactin is capable of chelating even in environments where the concentration of ferric ion is held very low, such as within living organisms. Pathogenic bacteria can steal iron from other living organisms using this mechanism, even though the concentration of iron is kept extremely low due to the toxicity of free iron.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.