Electronic Structure Contributions to Electron-Transfer Reactivity in Iron−Sulfur Active Sites: 3. Kinetics of Electron Transfer
- 16 January 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Inorganic Chemistry
- Vol. 42 (3), 696-708
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ic0203320
Abstract
The kinetics of electron transfer for rubredoxins are examined using density functional methods to determine the electronic structure characteristics that influence and allow for fast electron self-exchange in these electron-transport proteins. Potential energy surfaces for [FeX4]2-,1- models confirm that the inner-sphere reorganization energy is inherently small for tetrathiolates ( ≈ 0.1 eV), as evidenced by the only small changes in the equilibrium Fe−S bond distance during redox (Δrredox ≈ 0.05 Å). It is concluded that electronic relaxation and covalency in the reduced state allow for this small in this case relative to other redox couples, such as the tetrachloride. Using a large computational model to include the protein medium surrounding the [Fe(SCys)4]2-,1- active site in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Rubredoxin, the electronic coupling matrix element for electron self-exchange is defined for direct active-site contact ( ). The simple Beratan−Onuchic model is used to extend coupling over the complete surface of the protein to provide an understanding of probable electron-transfer pathways. Regions of similar coupling properties are grouped together to define a surface coupling map, which reveals that very efficient self-exchange occurs only within 4 σ-bonds of the active site. Longer-range electron transfer cannot support the fast rates of electron self-exchange observed experimentally. Pathways directly through the two surface cysteinate ligands dominate , but surface-accessible amides hydrogen-bonded to the cysteinates also contribute significantly to the rate of electron self-exchange.Keywords
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