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1.
[NiFe] hydrogenases catalyze the reversible heterolytic cleavage of molecular hydrogen. Several oxidized, inactive states of these enzymes are known that are distinguishable by their very different activation properties. So far, the structural basis for this difference has not been understood because of lack of relevant crystallographic data. Here, we present the crystal structure of the ready Ni-B state of Desulfovibrio fructosovorans [NiFe] hydrogenase and show it to have a putative -hydroxo Ni–Fe bridging ligand at the active site. On the other hand, a new, improved refinement procedure of the X-ray diffraction data obtained for putative unready Ni-A/Ni-SU states resulted in a more elongated electron density for the bridging ligand, suggesting that it is a diatomic species. The slow activation of the Ni-A state, compared with the rapid activation of the Ni-B state, is therefore proposed to result from the different chemical nature of the ligands in the two oxidized species. Our results along with very recent electrochemical studies suggest that the diatomic ligand could be hydro–peroxide.An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

2.
The inactive forms, unready (Ni-A, Ni-SU) and ready (Ni-B), of NiFe hydrogenases are modeled by examining the possibility of hydroxo, oxo, hydroperoxo, peroxo, and sulfenate groups in active-site models and comparing predicted IR frequencies and g tensors with those of the enzyme. The best models for Ni-A and Ni-SU have hydroxo (μ-OH) bridges between Fe and Ni and a terminal sulfenate [Ni–S(=O)Cys] group, although a hydroperoxo model for Ni-A is also quite viable, whereas the best model for Ni-B has only a μ-OH bridge. In addition, a mechanism for the activation of unready hydrogenase is proposed on the basis of the relative stabilities of sulfenate models versus peroxide models.  相似文献   

3.
The Ni-A and the Ni-B forms of the [NiFe] hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki F have been studied in single crystals by continuous wave and pulsed EPR spectroscopy at different temperatures (280?K, 80?K, and 10?K). For the first time, the orientation of the g-tensor axes with respect to the recently published atomic structure of the active site at 1.8?Å resolution was elucidated for Ni-A and Ni-B. The determined g-tensors have a similar orientation. The configuration of the electronic ground state is proposed to be Ni(III) 3d 1 z2 for Ni-A and Ni-B. The g z principal axis is close to the Ni-S(Cys549) direction; the g x and the g y axes are approximately along the Ni-S(Cys546) and Ni-S(Cys81) bonds, respectively. It is proposed that the difference between the Ni-A and Ni-B states lies in a protonation of the bridging ligand between the Ni and the Fe.  相似文献   

4.
The catalytic center of the [NiFe] hydrogenase of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki F in the oxidized states was investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance and electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy applied to single crystals of the enzyme. The experimental results were compared with density functional theory (DFT) calculations. For the Ni-B state, three hyperfine tensors could be determined. Two tensors have large isotropic hyperfine coupling constants and are assigned to the β-CH2 protons of the Cys-549 that provides one of the bridging sulfur ligands between Ni and Fe in the active center. From a comparison of the orientation of the third hyperfine tensor with the tensor obtained from DFT calculations an OH bridging ligand has been identified in the Ni-B state. For the Ni-A state broader signals were observed. The signals of the third proton, as observed for the “ready” state Ni-B, were not observed at the same spectral position for Ni-A, confirming a structural difference involving the bridging ligand in the “unready” state of the enzyme. Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at and is accessible for authorized users. Maurice van Gastel and Matthias Stein contributed equally to this work.  相似文献   

5.
The electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra of hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio gigas were observed during the activation of the enzyme in the oxidized, ‘unready’, state by hydrogen. Signals from nickel(III) (Ni-A), and the [3Fe-xS] cluster were reduced within less than 5 min, and a broad ESR signal appeared at the same time. On the basis of simultaneous changes in optical absorption spectrum, it is proposed that the broad ESR signal represents one or possibly both [4Fe-4S] clusters in the reduced state. The increase of enzyme activity was much slower (at 20°C), and was accompanied by the appearance of another type of nickel signal (Ni-C), and a further small decrease and the Ni-C signal became more intense. On further reoxidation by the dye dichlorophenolindophenol at pH above 7.0 the enzyme was converted to the ‘ready’ state, which could now be reactivated much more rapidly by strong reductants. The proportion of the ready state correlated with a third type of nickel signal, Ni-B. The unready enzyme could also be slowly activated by milder reducing conditions which reduced Ni-A and the [3Fe-xS] cluster but did not induce significant amounts of the Ni-C and [4Fe-4S]1+ signals. The optical absorption changes indicate that the Ni-A is not coupled to an iron-sulphur cluster. It is proposed that the activation of the enzyme involves reduction of the nickel and possibly iron-sulphur centres, followed by a conformational change which alters the coordination state of nickel, and that the unready state contains Ni(III) in the inactive conformation, the ready state Ni(III) in the active conformation, and the active state Ni(I).  相似文献   

6.
Molecular features that allow certain [NiFe] hydrogenases to catalyze the conversion of molecular hydrogen (H(2)) in the presence of dioxygen (O(2)) were investigated. Using X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), we compared the [NiFe] active site and FeS clusters in the O(2)-tolerant membrane-bound hydrogenase (MBH) of Ralstonia eutropha and the O(2)-sensitive periplasmic hydrogenase (PH) of Desulfovibrio gigas. Fe-XAS indicated an unusual complement of iron-sulfur centers in the MBH, likely based on a specific structure of the FeS cluster proximal to the active site. This cluster is a [4Fe4S] cubane in PH. For MBH, it comprises less than ~2.7 ? Fe-Fe distances and additional longer vectors of ≥3.4 ?, consistent with an Fe trimer with a more isolated Fe ion. Ni-XAS indicated a similar architecture of the [NiFe] site in MBH and PH, featuring Ni coordination by four thiolates of conserved cysteines, i.e., in the fully reduced state (Ni-SR). For oxidized states, short Ni-μO bonds due to Ni-Fe bridging oxygen species were detected in the Ni-B state of the MBH and in the Ni-A state of the PH. Furthermore, a bridging sulfenate (CysSO) is suggested for an inactive state (Ni(ia)-S) of the MBH. We propose that the O(2) tolerance of the MBH is mainly based on a dedicated electron donation from a modified proximal FeS cluster to the active site, which may favor formation of the rapidly reactivated Ni-B state instead of the slowly reactivated Ni-A state. Thereby, the catalytic activity of the MBH is facilitated in the presence of both H(2) and O(2).  相似文献   

7.
Structures and spectroscopic observables of the paramagnetic intermediates of the enzymatic reaction cycle of the metalloenzyme [NiFe] hydrogenase were calculated using relativistic density functional theory (DFT) within the zero-order regular approximation (ZORA). By comparing experimental and calculated magnetic resonance parameters (g- and hyperfine tensors) for the states Ni-A, Ni-B, Ni-C, Ni-L, and Ni-CO the details of the atomic composition of these paramagnetic intermediates could be elucidated that are mostly not available from X-ray structure analysis. In general, good agreement between calculated and experimental observables could be obtained. A detailed picture of the changes of the active center during the catalytic cycle was deduced from the obtained structures. Based on these results, a consistent model for the sequence of redox states including protonation steps is proposed which is important for understanding the mechanism of the [NiFe] hydrogenase.  相似文献   

8.
The crystal structure of the membrane-associated [NiFe] hydrogenase from Allochromatium vinosum has been determined to 2.1 Å resolution. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy on dissolved crystals showed that it is present in the Ni-A state (> 90%). The structure of the A. vinosum [NiFe] hydrogenase shows significant similarities with [NiFe] hydrogenase structures derived from Desulfovibrio species. The amino acid sequence identity is ∼ 50%. The bimetallic [NiFe] active site is located in the large subunit of the heterodimer and possesses three diatomic non-protein ligands coordinated to the Fe (two CN , one CO). Ni is bound to the protein backbone via four cysteine thiolates; two of them also bridge the two metals. One of the bridging cysteines (Cys64) exhibits a modified thiolate in part of the sample. A mono-oxo bridging ligand was assigned between the metal ions of the catalytic center. This is in contrast to a proposal for Desulfovibrio sp. hydrogenases that show a di-oxo species in this position for the Ni-A state. The additional metal site located in the large subunit appears to be a Mg2+ ion. Three iron-sulfur clusters were found in the small subunit that forms the electron transfer chain connecting the catalytic site with the molecular surface. The calculated anomalous Fourier map indicates a distorted proximal iron-sulfur cluster in part of the crystals. This altered proximal cluster is supposed to be paramagnetic and is exchange coupled to the Ni3+ ion and the medial [Fe3S4]+ cluster that are both EPR active (S = 1/2 species). This finding of a modified proximal cluster in the [NiFe] hydrogenase might explain the observation of split EPR signals that are occasionally detected in the oxidized state of membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenases as from A. vinosum.  相似文献   

9.
[NiFe] hydrogenase catalyzes reversible oxidation of molecular hydrogen. Its active site is constructed of a hetero dinuclear Ni–Fe complex, and the oxidation state of the Ni ion changes according to the redox state of the enzyme. We found that the Ni-A state (an inactive unready, oxidized state) of [NiFe] hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki F (DvMF) is light sensitive and forms a new state (Ni-AL) with irradiation of visible light. The Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) bands at 1956, 2084 and 2094 cm?1 of the Ni-A state shifted to 1971, 2086 and 2098 cm?1 in the Ni-AL state. The g-values of gx = 2.30, gy = 2.23 and gz = 2.01 for the signals in the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of the Ni-A state at room temperature varied for ?0.009, +0.012 and +0.010, respectively, upon light irradiation. The light-induced Ni-AL state converted back immediately to the Ni-A state under dark condition at room temperature. These results show that the coordination structure of the Fe site of the Ni-A state of [NiFe] hydrogenase is perturbed significantly by light irradiation with relatively small coordination change at the Ni site.  相似文献   

10.
The [NiFe] hydrogenase from the sulphate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki F is reversibly inhibited in the presence of molecular oxygen. A key intermediate in the reactivation process, Ni-SIr, provides the link between fully oxidized (Ni-A, Ni-B) and active (Ni-SIa, Ni-C and Ni-R) forms of hydrogenase. In this work Ni-SIr was found to be light-sensitive (T ≤ 110 K), similar to the active Ni-C and the CO-inhibited states. Transition to the final photoproduct state (Ni-SL) was shown to involve an additional transient light-induced state (Ni-SI1961). Rapid scan kinetic infrared measurements provided activation energies for the transition from Ni-SL to Ni-SIr in protonated as well as in deuterated samples. The inhibitor CO was found not to react with the active site of the Ni-SL state. The wavelength dependence of the Ni-SIr photoconversion was examined in the range between 410 and 680 nm. Light-induced effects were associated with a nickel-centred electronic transition, possibly involving a change in the spin state of nickel (Ni2+). In addition, at T ≤ 40 K the CN stretching vibrations of Ni-SL were found to be dependent on the colour of the monochromatic light used to irradiate the species, suggesting a change in the interaction of the hydrogen-bonding network of the surrounding amino acids. A possible mechanism for the photochemical process, involving displacement of the oxygen-based ligand, is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The thermostable hydrogenase from Thiocapsa roseopersicina was examined by low-temperature ESR spectroscopy. Two types of signals were detected, from an oxidized iron-sulphur cluster and a nickel centre (Ni-A). In the oxidized protein additional signals were observed due to spin-spin interaction between the two paramagnetic centres. This interaction could be reversibly abolished by reduction to a redox potential below 105 mV. This implies that an additional redox centre is involved in the interaction, for which an Fe3+ ion is suggested. Reduction with hydrogen induced a second type of nickel ESR signal (Ni-C), corresponding to an intermediate redox state seen in other nickel hydrogenases. The Ni-C species was light-sensitive at cryogenic temperatures. At temperatures near to 4.2 K the Ni-C signal showed evidence of interaction with another paramagnetic centre, presumably a second iron-sulphur cluster. On reoxidation a signal due to a third Ni(III) species, Ni-B, increased in amplitude. These results establish that metal centres in the hydrogenase from T. roseopersicina are closely similar to those of the well-studied hydrogenase from Chromatium vinosum.  相似文献   

12.
The Ni-Fe site in the active membrane-bound [NiFe]-hydrogenase from Allochromatium vinosum can exist in three different redox states. In the most oxidized state (Ni(a)-S) the nickel is divalent. The most reduced state (Ni(a)-SR) likewise has Ni(2+), while the intermediate state (Ni(a)-C) has Ni(3+). The transitions between these states have been studied by stopped-flow Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. It is inferred from the data that the Ni(a)-S --> Ni(a)-C* and Ni(a)-C* --> Ni(a)-SR transitions induced by dihydrogen require one of the [4Fe-4S] clusters to be oxidized. Enzyme in the Ni(a)-S* state with all of the iron-sulfur clusters reduced reacts with dihydrogen to form the Ni(a)-SR state in milliseconds. By contrast, when one of the cubane clusters is oxidized, the Ni(a)-S state reacts with dihydrogen to form the Ni(a)-C state with all of the iron-sulfur clusters reduced. The competition between dihydrogen and carbon monoxide for binding to the active site was dependent on the redox state of the nickel ion. Formation of the Ni(a)-S.CO state (Ni(2+)) by reacting CO with enzyme in the Ni(a)-SR and Ni(a)-S states (Ni(2+)) is considerably faster than its formation from enzyme in the Ni(a)-C* (Ni(3+)) state. Excess oxygen converted hydrogen-reduced enzyme to the inactive Ni(r)* state within 158 ms, suggesting a direct reaction at the Ni-Fe site. With lower O(2) concentrations the formation of intermediate states was observed. The results are discussed in the light of the present knowledge of the structure and mechanism of action of the A. vinosum enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
The soluble NAD+-reducing Ni-Fe hydrogenase (SH) from Ralstonia eutropha H16 is remarkable because it cleaves hydrogen in the presence of dioxygen at a unique Ni-Fe active site (Burgdorf et al. (2005) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 127, 576). By X-ray absorption (XAS), FTIR, and EPR spectroscopy, we monitored the structure and oxidation state of its metal centers during H2 turnover. In NADH-activated protein, a change occurred from the (CN)O2Ni(II)(mu-S)2Fe(II)(CN)3(CO) site dominant in the wild-type SH to a standard-like S2Ni(II)(mu-S)2Fe(II)(CN)2(CO) site as the prevailing species in a specific mutant protein, HoxH-H16L. The wild-type SH primarily was active in H2 cleavage. The nonstandard reaction mechanism does not involve stable EPR-detectable trivalent Ni oxidation states, namely, the Ni-A,B,C states as observed in standard hydrogenases. In the HoxH-mutant protein H16L, H2 oxidation was impaired, but H2 production occurred via a stable Ni-C state (Ni(III)-H(-)-Fe(II)), suggesting a reaction sequence similar to that of standard hydrogenases. It is proposed that reductive activation by NADH of both wild-type and H16L proteins causes the release of an oxygen species from Ni and is initiated by electron transfer from a [2Fe-2S] cluster in the HoxU subunit that at first becomes reduced by electrons from NADH. Electrons derived from H2 cleavage, on the other hand, are transferred to NAD+ via a different pathway involving a [4Fe-4S] cluster in HoxY, which is reducible only in wild-type SH but not in the H16L variant.  相似文献   

14.
X-ray edge absorption of copper and extended fine structure studies of both copper and iron centers have been made of cytochrome oxidase from beef heart, Paracoccus dentrificans, and HB-8 thermophilic bacteria (1-2.5 mM in heme). The desired redox state (fully oxidized, reduced CO, mixed valence formate and CO) in the x-ray beam was controlled by low temperature (-140 degrees C) and was continuously monitored by simultaneous optical spectroscopy and by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) monitoring every 30 min of x-ray exposure. The structure of the active site, a cytochrome a3-copper pair in fully oxidized and in mixed valence formate states where they are spin coupled, contains a sulphur bridge with three ligands 2.60 +/- 0.03 A from Fea3 and 2.18 +/- 0.03 A from Cua3. The distance between Fea3 and Cua3 is 3.75 +/- 0.05 A, making the sulphur bond angle 103 degrees reasonable for sp3 sulphur bonding. The Fea3 first shell has four typical heme nitrogens (2.01 +/- 0.03 A) with a proximal nitrogen at 2.14 +/- 0.03 A. The sixth ligand is the bridging sulphur. The Cua3 first shell is identical to oxidized stellacyanin containing two nitrogens and a bridging sulphur. Upon reduction with CO, the active site is identical to reduced stellacyanin for the Cua3 first shell and contains the sulphur that forms the bridge in fully oxidized and mixed valence formate states. The Fea3 first shell is identical to oxyhemoglobin but has CO instead of O2. The other redox centers, Fea and the other "EPR detectable" Cu are not observed in higher shells of Fea3. Fea has six equidistant nitrogens and Cua has one (or two) nitrogens and three (or two) sulphurs with typical distances; these ligands change only slight on reduction. These structures afford the basis for an oxygen reduction mechanism involving oxy- and peroxy intermediates.  相似文献   

15.
Crystallographic studies of the intermediate states between unliganded and fully liganded hemoglobin (Hb) have revealed a large range of subtle but functionally important structural differences. Only one T state has been reported, whereas three other quaternary states (the R state, B state, and R2 or Y state) for liganded Hb have been characterized; other studies have defined liganded Hbs that are intermediate between the T and R states. The high-salt crystal structure of bovine carbonmonoxy (CO bovine) Hb has been determined at a resolution of 2.1 A and is described here. A detailed comparison with other crystallographically solved Hb forms (T, R, R2 or Y) shows that the quaternary structure of CO bovine Hb closely resembles R state Hb. However, our analysis of these structures has identified several important differences between CO bovine Hb and R state Hb. Compared with the R state structures, the beta-subunit N-terminal region has shifted closer to the central water cavity in CO bovine Hb. In addition, both the alpha- and beta-subunits in CO bovine Hb have more constrained heme environments that appear to be intermediate between the T and R states. Moreover, the distal pocket of the beta-subunit heme in CO bovine Hb shows significantly closer interaction between the bound CO ligand and the Hb distal residues Val 63(E11) and His 63(E7). The constrained heme groups and the increased steric contact involving the CO ligand and the distal heme residues relative to human Hb may explain in part the low intrinsic oxygen affinity of bovine Hb.  相似文献   

16.
Infrared spectroscopy has been used to examine the oxidized and CO-inhibited forms of Fe-only hydrogenase I from Clostridium pasteurianum. For the oxidized enzyme, five bands are detected in the infrared spectral region between 2100 and 1800 cm(-1). The pattern of infrared bands is consistent with the presence of two terminally coordinated carbon monoxide molecules, two terminally coordinated cyanide molecules, and one bridging carbon monoxide molecule, ligated to the Fe atoms of the active site [2Fe] subcluster. Infrared spectra of the carbon monoxide-inhibited state, prepared using both natural abundance CO and 13CO, indicate that the two terminally coordinated CO ligands that are intrinsic to the enzyme are coordinated to different Fe atoms of the active site [2Fe] subcluster. Irradiation of the CO-inhibited state at cryogenic temperatures gives rise to two species with dramatically different infrared spectra. The first species has an infrared spectrum identical to the spectrum of the oxidized enzyme, and can be assigned as arising from the photolysis of the exogenous CO from the active site. This species, which has been observed in X-ray crystallographic measurements [Lemon, B. J., and Peters, J. W. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 3793], decays above 150 K. The second light-induced species decays above 80 K and is characterized by loss of the infrared band associated with the Fe bridging CO at 1809 cm(-1). Potential models for the second photolysis event are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Mono- and binuclear complexes of (Re(CO)3Cl) with dipyrido[2,3-a:3',2'-c]-6,7-dimethylphenazine (ppbMe2) were synthesised and their photophysical properties probed using picosecond time-resolved infrared spectroscopy (TRIR). Excitation of these complexes in solution at 400 nm produces short-lived excited states. The IR spectrum of the excited state of the mononuclear [Re(CO)3Cl(ppbMe2)] have nu(CO) bands shifted to higher wavenumber relative to those of the ground state. This is consistent with formation of a (3)MLCT excited state. The IR spectrum of the excited state of the bimetallic [(Re(CO)3Cl)2(micro-ppbMe2)] shows the formation of two distinct groups of nu(CO) bands. This is interpreted as the formation of two distinct Re sites arising from a localised MLCT state with formally oxidised Re centre and a formally reduced bridging ligand. The nu(CO) bands of the adjacent Re centre are affected by the reduction of the bridging ligand. On the IR timescale the excited state structure is best formulated as [Cl(CO)3Re(II)(micro-ppbMe2 *-)Re(I)(CO)3Cl].  相似文献   

18.
The lowest energy structure for Mn2(BF)(CO)10 is predicted to consist of two Mn(CO)5 groups bridged by a BF group without a manganese-manganese bond. This structure is related to the stable compounds Mn2(μ-BX)(CO)10 (X = Cl, Br) and [(η5-C5H5)Ru(CO)2]2(μ-BF), which have been synthesized and characterized by X-ray crystallography. The following principles determine the lowest energy structures of the Mn2(BF)(CO)n (n = 9, 8, 7, 6) derivatives: (1) two-electron donor bridging μ-BF groups are highly favorable; (2) four-electron donor bridging η2-μ-BF groups are not found and thus appear to be highly unfavorable. Thus the lowest energy structure of Mn2(BF)(CO)9 is a doubly bridged structure with bridging CO and BF groups, in contrast to the experimentally observed unbridged structure of Mn2(CO)10. The lowest energy structures of Mn2(BF)(CO)8 have either a four-electron donor η2-μ-CO group or a two-electron donor bridging BF group. Similarly the lowest energy structures of the more highly unsaturated Mn2(BF)(CO)n (n = 7, 6) are singlet (for n = 7) or triplet (for n = 6) states in which the BF group is a bridging rather than a terminal ligand.  相似文献   

19.
The thermolysis of trans-IrL2(CO)Cl(H)(C6H5) (1abd; L=P(i-Pr)3; H trans to CO) produces benzene and the Vaska-type complex IrL2(CO)Cl. A mechanistic study of the reaction has shown that 1a reversibly loses CO at 120 °C (as evidenced by the incorporation of 13CO) and isomerizes to the previously unreported 1b (H trans to Cl). It was found that 1b is the complex primarily responsible for the formation of benzene upon thermolysis under CO atmosphere; direct loss of benzene from 1a was determined to be, at most, a minor pathway. Benzaldehyde was also formed as a product of thermolysis of 1a under CO atmosphere. The first-order rate constant for benzene elimination in the absence of CO was found to be 8.5 × 10−5 s−1. The presence of only 5 Torr CO results in a decrease to 2.0 × 10−5 s−1, but little further inhibition is observed above 5 Torr CO. Added dihydrogen (100 Torr) was found to effect a novel catalysis of benzene elimination from 1a in the absence of CO atmosphere; it is suggested that trace amounts of dihydrogen, present in solutions of 1a, are responsible for the enhanced rate of elimination in the absence of CO. The thermolysis of 1-d6 in toluene was found to proceed without any toluene incorporation, implying that arene loss is irreversible.  相似文献   

20.
Density-functional calculations have been used to examine the electronic structure and bonding in the recently reported complex [(PMe(3))(CO)(2)Fe(mu-pdt)(mu-CO)Fe(CO)(IMes)](+) (1(+), IMes=1,3-bis(2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)-imidazol-2-ylidene). This mixed valent Fe(II)Fe(I) complex features a rotated geometry that places a carbonyl ligand in a semi-bridging position, which makes it an accurate model of the S =(1/2) resting state of the [FeFe]-hydrogenase active site. Calculations indicate that the unpaired electron in this complex lies almost entirely on the rotated iron center, implying that this iron remains in the Fe(I) oxidation state, while the unrotated iron has been oxidized to Fe(II). The frontier molecular orbitals in 1(+) are compared with those in the neutral Fe(I)Fe(I) precursor (PMe(3))(CO)(2)Fe(mu-pdt)(mu-CO)Fe(CO)(IMes) at both its optimized geometry (1) and constrained to a rotated geometry (1(rot)). These theoretical results are used to address the role of the bridging CO ligand in 1(+) and to predict reactivity patterns; they are related back to the intricate biological mechanism of [FeFe]-hydrogenase.  相似文献   

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