首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
This minireview addresses questions on the mechanism of oxidative water cleavage with special emphasis on the coupling of electron (ET) and proton transfer (PT) of each individual redox step of the reaction sequence and on the mode of O-O bond formation. The following topics are discussed: (1) the multiphasic kinetics of Y(Z)(ox) formation by P680(+*) originate from three different types of rate limitations: (i) nonadiabatic electron transfer for the "fast" ns reaction, (ii) local "dielectric" relaxation for the "slow" ns reaction, and (iii) "large-scale" proton shift for the micros kinetics; (2) the ET/PT-coupling mode of the individual redox transitions within the water oxidizing complex (WOC) driven by Y(Z)(ox) is assumed to depend on the redox state S(i): the oxidation steps of S(0) and S(1) comprise separate ET and PT pathways while those of S(2) and S(3) take place via proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) analogous to Jerry Babcock's hydrogen atom abstractor model [Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1458 (2000) 199]; (3) S(3) is postulated to be a multistate redox level of the WOC with fast dynamic equilibria of both redox isomerism and proton tautomerism. The primary event in the essential O-O bond formation is the population of a state S(3)(P) characterized by an electronic configuration and nuclear geometry that corresponds with a complexed hydrogen peroxide; (4) the peroxidic type S(3)(P) is the entatic state for formation of complexed molecular oxygen through S(3) oxidation by Y(Z)(ox); and (5) the protein matrix itself is proposed to exert catalytic activity by functioning as "PCET director". The WOC is envisaged as a supermolecule that is especially tailored for oxidative water cleavage and acts as a molecular machine.  相似文献   

2.
Photoinduced electron transfer in biological systems, especially in proteins, is a highly intriguing matter. Its mechanistic details cannot be addressed by structural data obtained by crystallography alone because this provides only static information on a given redox system. In combination with transient spectroscopy and site-directed manipulation of the protein, however, a dynamic molecular picture of the ET process may be obtained. In BLUF (blue light sensors using FAD) photoreceptors, proton-coupled electron transfer between a tyrosine and the flavin cofactor is the key reaction to switch from a dark-adapted to a light-adapted state, which corresponds to the biological signaling state. Particularly puzzling is the fact that, although the various naturally occurring BLUF domains show little difference in the amino acid composition of the flavin binding pocket, the reaction rates of the forward reaction differ quite largely from a few ps up to several hundred ps. In this study, we modified the redox potential of the flavin/tyrosine redox pair by site-directed mutagenesis close to the flavin C2 carbonyl and fluorination of the tyrosine, respectively. We provide information on how changes in the redox potential of either reaction partner significantly influence photoinduced proton-coupled electron transfer. The altered redox potentials allowed us furthermore to experimentally describe an excited state charge transfer intermediately prior to electron transfer in the BLUF photocycle. Additionally, we show that the electron transfer rate directly correlates with the quantum yield of signaling state formation.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetic characteristics of the hydrogen uptake reaction of hydrogenase, obtained by conventional activity measurements, led to the proposal of an autocatalytic reaction step in the hydrogenase cycle or during the activation process. The autocatalytic behavior of an enzyme reaction may result in oscillating concentrations of enzyme intermediates and/or products contributing to the autocatalytic step. This behavior has been investigated in the early phase of the hydrogenase-methyl viologen reaction. To measure fast hydrogenase kinetics, flash-reduced methyl viologen has been used as a light-induced trigger in transient kinetic phenomena associated with intermolecular electron transfer to hydrogenase. Here we report fast kinetic measurements of the hydrogenase-methyl viologen reaction by use of the excimer laser flash-reduced redox dye. The results are evaluated on the assumption of an autocatalytic reaction in the hydrogenase kinetic cycle. The kinetic constants of the autocatalytic reaction, i.e. the methyl viologen binding to and release from hydrogenase, were determined, and limits of the kinetic constants relating to the intramolecular (intraenzyme) reactions were set.  相似文献   

4.
Soluble quinoprotein dehydrogenases oxidize a wide range of sugar, alcohol, amine, and aldehyde substrates. The physiological electron acceptors for these enzymes are not pyridine nucleotides but are other soluble redox proteins. This makes these enzymes and their electron acceptors excellent systems with which to study mechanisms of long-range interprotein electron transfer reactions. The tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ)-dependent methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) transfers electrons to a blue copper protein, amicyanin. It has been possible to alter the rate of electron transfer by using different redox forms of MADH, varying reaction conditions, and performing site-directed mutagenesis on these proteins. From kinetic and thermodynamic analyses of the reaction rates, it was possible to determine whether a change in rate is due a change in Delta G(0), electronic coupling, reorganization energy or kinetic mechanism. Examples of each of these cases are discussed in the context of the known crystal structures of the electron transfer protein complexes. The pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ)-dependent methanol dehydrogenase transfers electrons to a c-type cytochrome. Kinetic and thermodynamic analyses of this reaction indicated that this electron transfer reaction was conformationally coupled. Quinohemoproteins possess a quinone cofactor as well as one or more c-type hemes within the same protein. The structures of a PQQ-dependent quinohemoprotein alcohol dehydrogenase and a TTQ-dependent quinohemoprotein amine dehydrogenase are described with respect to their roles in intramolecular and intermolecular protein electron transfer reactions.  相似文献   

5.
This mini review is an attempt to briefly summarize our current knowledge on light driven oxidative water splitting in photosynthesis. The reaction leading to molecular oxygen and four protons via photosynthesis comprises thermodynamic and kinetic constraints that require a balanced fine tuning of the reaction coordinates. The mode of coupling between electron (ET) and proton transfer (PT) reactions is shown to be of key mechanistic relevance for the redox turnover of Y(Z) and the reactions within the WOC. The WOC is characterized by peculiar energetics of its oxidation steps in the WOC. In all oxygen evolving photosynthetic organisms the redox state S(1) is thermodynamically most stable and therefore this general feature is assumed to be of physiological relevance. Available information on the Gibbs energy differences between the individual redox states S(i+1) and S(i) and on the activation energies of their oxidative transitions are used to construct a general reaction coordinate of oxidative water splitting in photosystem II (PS II). Finally, an attempt is presented to cast our current state of knowledge into a mechanism of oxidative water splitting with special emphasis on the formation of the essential O-O bond and the active role of the protein environment in tuning the local proton activity that depends on time and redox state S(i). The O-O linkage is assumed to take place within a multistate equilibrium at the redox level of S(3), comprising both redox isomerism and proton tautomerism. It is proposed that one state, S(3)(P), attains an electronic configuration and nuclear geometry that corresponds with a hydrogen bonded peroxide which acts as the entatic state for the generation of complexed molecular oxygen through S(3)(P) oxidation by Y(Z)(ox).  相似文献   

6.
A new method is introduced to determine the kinetic parameters of electron transfer reactions of biologically important compounds, based on the measurements of the half-peak width (DeltaE(p/2)) of the square-wave voltammograms. A simple surface (diffusionless) redox reaction, and a simple electrode reaction occurring from dissolved state are considered as model systems. In the region of quasireversible electron transfer, the half-peak widths of theoretical square-wave voltammograms are linear functions of the logarithm of the dimensionless kinetic parameter ln(K) that characterizes the rate of the electron transfer reaction. The dimensionless kinetic parameter K is defined as K=k(s)(fD)(-0.5) for the redox reaction taking place from dissolved state, whereas for the surface redox reaction K is defined as K=k(s)/f (k(s) is the standard rate constant of electron transfer, f is the SW frequency, and D is the diffusion coefficient). A set of linear regression equations for the dependences DeltaE(p/2)vs. ln(K) are derived, which can be used for rapid and precise determination of the charge-transfer kinetic parameters. The estimated values for the standard rate constants of various biologically relevant redox systems using this approach are in very good agreement with the experimental values determined by other square-wave voltammetric methods. The square-wave voltammetric half-peak width method can be used as a simple and reliable alternative to other voltammetric methods developed for the kinetic characterization of electron transfer rates.  相似文献   

7.
Direct and indirect electron transfer between electrodes and redox proteins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The direct electrochemistry of redox proteins has been achieved at a variety of electrodes, including modified gold, pyrolytic graphite and metal oxides. Careful design of electrode surfaces and electrolyte conditions are required for the attainment of rapid and reversible protein-electrode interaction. The electron transfer reactions of more complex systems, such as redox enzymes, are now being examined. The 'well-behaved' electrochemistry of redox proteins can be usefully exploited by coupling the electrode reaction to enzymes for which the redox proteins act as cofactors. In systems where direct electron transfer is very slow, small electron carriers, or mediators, may be employed to enhance the rate of electron exchange with the electrode. The organometallic compound ferrocene and its derivatives have proved particularly effective in this role. A new generation of electrochemical biosensors employs ferrocene derivatives as mediators.  相似文献   

8.
A quantitative study of the kinetics of electron transfer under coupled conditions in photosynthetic bacteria has so far been prevented by overlap of the electrochromic signals of carotenoids and bacteriochlorophyll with the absorbance changes of cytochromes and reaction centers. In this paper a method is presented by which the electrochromic contribution at any wavelength can be calculated from the electrochromic signal recorded at 505 nm, using a set of empirically determined polynomial functions. The electrochromic contribution to kinetic changes at any wavelength can then be subtracted to leave the true kinetics of the redox changes. The corrected redox changes of the reaction center measured at 542 and 605 nm mutually agree, thus providing an excellent test of self-consistency of the method. The corrected traces for reaction center and of cytochrome b-566 demonstrate large effects of the membrane potential on the rate and poise of electron transfer. It will be possible to study the interrelation between proton gradient and individual electron reactions under flash or steady-state illumination.  相似文献   

9.
In this review, we compare the intra-molecular and inter-molecular electron transfer rate constants of the high-potential branch of the cytochrome bc(1) complex. Several methods such as the conventional stopped-flow spectroscopy, pH-induced electron transfer, photoactivated ruthenium complex induced electron transfer and photoreleaseable caged quinol, have been used to determine reaction rates between redox centers in an attempt to elucidate the reaction mechanism of this vital energy conserving complex. Since the most active pure cytochrome bc(1) complex has a turnover number of 800 s(-1), any step with a rate constant much larger than this will not be rate-limiting. The most likely rate-limiting step is the cytochrome b redox state governed movement of the head domain of iron-sulfur protein from its electron-accepting site ("fixed" or "b-state" position) to its electron donating site ("c(1)-state" position).  相似文献   

10.
Gernot Renger  Philipp Kühn 《BBA》2007,1767(6):458-471
This mini review is an attempt to briefly summarize our current knowledge on light driven oxidative water splitting in photosynthesis. The reaction leading to molecular oxygen and four protons via photosynthesis comprises thermodynamic and kinetic constraints that require a balanced fine tuning of the reaction coordinates. The mode of coupling between electron (ET) and proton transfer (PT) reactions is shown to be of key mechanistic relevance for the redox turnover of YZ and the reactions within the WOC. The WOC is characterized by peculiar energetics of its oxidation steps in the WOC. In all oxygen evolving photosynthetic organisms the redox state S1 is thermodynamically most stable and therefore this general feature is assumed to be of physiological relevance. Available information on the Gibbs energy differences between the individual redox states Si+1 and Si and on the activation energies of their oxidative transitions are used to construct a general reaction coordinate of oxidative water splitting in photosystem II (PS II). Finally, an attempt is presented to cast our current state of knowledge into a mechanism of oxidative water splitting with special emphasis on the formation of the essential O-O bond and the active role of the protein environment in tuning the local proton activity that depends on time and redox state Si. The O-O linkage is assumed to take place within a multistate equilibrium at the redox level of S3, comprising both redox isomerism and proton tautomerism. It is proposed that one state, S3(P), attains an electronic configuration and nuclear geometry that corresponds with a hydrogen bonded peroxide which acts as the entatic state for the generation of complexed molecular oxygen through S3(P) oxidation by YZox.  相似文献   

11.
A molecular assembly consisting of a redox enzyme, NADH peroxidase, a metallized double-helical peptide, and a gold nanoparticle immobilized onto a gold wire derivatized with a benzenedithiol compound, initiated and conducted redox signals in the presence of H(2)O(2) and NADH. The current generated by the binding of NADH, the electron donor, was transduced through the molecular assembly with apparently little loss of signal to the solution. The currents measured correlate to an electron transfer rate constant on the order of 3,000 s(-1) within each assembly. This electron transfer rate is two orders of magnitude higher than the endogenous electron transfer rate from NADH to the native enzyme, 27 s(-1). This rate indicates that the metallized peptide is in a conformation conducive for electron transfer and, in conjunction with the redox enzyme, can form effective conduits of electrical signals. This work demonstrates the feasibility of utilizing designed and highly efficient biomolecular assemblies for the production of ultra-sensitive, in-situ biosensors.  相似文献   

12.
It is suggested that the transfer of electrons within the biological electron transfer chain is subject to the laws of electrochemical kinetics, when membrane-bound electron carriers are involved. Consequently, small tightly bound molecular complexes of two or more electron transfer proteins of different redox potential within an energy transducing membrane, which accept electrons from a donor at one membrane surface and donate it to an acceptor at the other, may be regarded as real and functioning molecular redox elements, which convert the free energy of electrons into electrochemical energy. Especially, the transfer of an electron from excited chlorophyll to an electron acceptor can be looked upon as an electrochemical oxidation of excited chlorophyll at such a complex. In this reaction the electron acceptor complex behaves like a polarized electrode, in which the electrochemical potential gradient is provided by a gradient of redox potential of its constituents.Calculations and qualitative considerations show that this concept leads to a consistent understanding of both primary and secondary reactions in photosynthesis (electron capture, delayed light emission, ion transfer, energy conversion) and can also be applied to oxidative phosphorylation. Within the proposed concept, ion transfer and the development of ion gradients have to be considered as results of electrochemical activity—not as intermediates for energy conversion. For energetic reasons, a non steady state, periodic energy coupling mechanism is postulated which functions by periodic changes of the capacity of the (electrochemically) charged energy transducing membrane, during which capacitive surplus energy is released as chemical energy. Energy transducing membranes may thus be considered as electrochemical parametric energy transformers. This concept explains active periodic conformation changes and mechanochemical processes of energy transducing membranes as energetically essential events, which trigger energy conversion according to the principle of variable parameter energy transformers.The electrochemical approach presented here has been suggested and is supported by the observation, that with respect to electron capture and conversion of excitation energy into electrochemical energy, the behaviour of excited chlorophyll at suitable solid state (semiconductor) electrodes is very similar to that of chlorophyll in photosynthetic reaction centers.  相似文献   

13.
The intermolecular electron transfer kinetics between nitrite reductase (NiR, cytochrome cd1) isolated from Pseudomonas nautica and three cytochromes c isolated from the same strain, as well as the intramolecular electron transfer between NiR heme c and NiR heme d1, were investigated by cyclic voltammetry. All cytochromes (cytochrome c552, cytochrome c553 and cytochrome C553(548)) exhibited well-behaved electrochemistry. The individual diffusion coefficients and mid-point redox potentials were determined. Under the experimental conditions, only cytochrome c552 established a rapid electron transfer with NiR. At acidic pH, the intermolecular electron transfer (cytochrome c(552red)-->NiR heme cox) is a second-order reaction with a rate constant (k2) of 4.1+/-0.1x10(5) M(-1) s(-1) (pH=6.3 and 100 mM NaCl). Under these conditions, the intermolecular reaction represents the rate-limiting step. A minimum estimate of 33 s(-1) could be determined for the first-order rate constant (k1) of the intramolecular electron transfer reaction NiR heme c(red)-->NiR heme d1ox. The pH dependence of k2 values was investigated at pH values ranging from 5.8 to 8.0. When the pH is progressively shifted towards basic values, the rate constant of the intramolecular electron transfer reaction NiR heme c(red)-->NiR heme d1ox decreases gradually to a point where it becomes rate limiting. At pH 8.0 we determined a value of 1.4+/-0.7 s(-1), corresponding to a k2 value of 2.2+/-1.1x10(4) M(-1) s(-1) for the intermolecular step. The physiological relevance of these results is discussed with a particular emphasis on the proposed mechanism of "dead-end product" formation.  相似文献   

14.
NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (called complex I for mitochondrial enzyme and NDH-1 for bacterial counterparts) is an energy transducer, which utilizes the redox energy derived from the oxidation of NADH with ubiquinone to generate an electrochemical proton gradient (Deltamu(H(+))) across the membrane. The complex I/NDH-1 contain one non-covalently bound flavin mononucleotide and as many as eight iron-sulfur clusters as electron transfer components in common. In addition, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic studies have revealed that three ubisemiquinone (SQ) species with distinct spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties are detectable in complex I and function as electron/proton translocators. Thus, the understanding of molecular properties of the individual quinone species is prerequisite to elucidate the energy-coupling mechanism of complex I. We have investigated these SQ species using EPR spectroscopy and found that the three SQ species have strikingly different properties. We will report characteristics of these SQ species and discuss possible functional roles of individual quinone species in the electron/proton transfer reaction of complex I/NDH-1.  相似文献   

15.
Cytochrome c6from the unicellular green alga Scenedesmus obliquus was sequenced, crystallized in its reduced and oxidized state and the three-dimensional structure of the protein in both redox states was determined by X-ray crystallography. Reduced cytochrome c6crystallized as a monomer in the space group P 21212, whereas the oxidized protein crystallized as a dimer in the space group P 3121. The structures were solved by molecular replacement and refined to 1. 9 and 2.0 A, respectively.Comparison of the structures of both redox states revealed only slight differences on the protein surface, whereas a distortion along the axis between the heme iron and its coordinating Met61 residue was observed. No redox-dependent movement of internal water molecules could be detected. The high degree of similarity of the surfaces and charge distributions of both redox states, as well as the dimerization of cytochrome c6as observed in the oxidized crystal, is discussed with respect to its biological relevance and its implications for the reaction mechanisms between cytochrome c6and its redox partners. The dimer of oxidized cytochrome c6may represent a molecular structure occurring in a binary complex with cytochrome b6f. This assembly might be required for the correct orientation of cytochrome c6with respect to its redox partner cytochrome b6f, facilitating the electron transfer within the complex. If the dimerization is not redox-dependent in vivo, the almost identical surfaces of both redox states do not support a long range differentiation between reduced and oxidized cyt c6, i.e. a random collision model for the formation of an electron transfer complex must be assumed.  相似文献   

16.
The transfer of electrons between proteins is an essential step in biological energy production. Two protein redox partners are often artificially crosslinked to investigate the poorly understood mechanism by which they interact. To better understand the effect of crosslinking on electron transfer rates, we have constructed dimers of azurin by crosslinking the monomers. The measured electron exchange rates, combined with crystal structures of the dimers, demonstrate that the length of the linker can have a dramatic effect on the structure of the dimer and the electron transfer rate. The presence of ordered water molecules in the protein-protein interface may considerably influence the electronic coupling between redox centers.  相似文献   

17.
Photoexcitation of flavin analogs generates the lowest triplet state (via intersystem crossing from the first excited singlet state) in the nanosecond time domain and with high quantum efficiency. The triplet, being a strong oxidant, can abstract a hydrogen atom (or an electron) from a reduced donor in a diffusion-controlled reaction. If the donor is a redox protein, the oxidation process can be used to initiate an electron transfer sequence involving either intramolecular or intermolecular reactions. If the donor is an organic compound such as EDTA, the neutral flavin semiquinone will be produced by H atom abstraction; this is a strong reductant and can subsequently transfer a hydrogen atom (or an electron) to an oxidized redox protein, thereby again initiating a sequence of intramolecular or intermolecular processes. If flavin photoexcitation is accomplished using a pulsed laser light source, the initiation of these protein electron transfer reactions can be made to occur in the nanosecond to microsecond time domain, and the sequence of events can be followed by time-resolved spectrophotometry to obtain rate constants and thus mechanistic information. The present paper describes this technology, and selected examples of its use in the investigation of redox protein mechanisms are given.  相似文献   

18.
In the past decade light-induced electron transfer reactions in photosystem Ⅰ have been the subject of intensive investigations that have led to the elucidation of some unique characteristics,the most striking of which is the existence of two parallel,functional,redox active cofactors chains.This process is generally referred to as bidirectional electron transfer.Here we present a review of the principal evidences that have led to the uncovering of bidirectionality in the reaction centre of photosystem Ⅰ.A special focus is dedicated to the results obtained combining time-resolved spectroscopic techniques,either difference absorption or electron paramagnetic resonance,with molecular genetics,which allows,through modification of the binding of redox active cofactors with the reaction centre subunits,an effect on their physical-chemical properties.  相似文献   

19.
In the past decade light-induced electron transfer reactions in photosystem I have been the subject of intensive investigations that have led to the elucidation of some unique characteristics, the most striking of which is the existence of two parallel, functional, redox active cofactors chains. This process is generally referred to as bidirectional electron transfer. Here we present a review of the principal evidences that have led to the uncovering of bidirectionality in the reaction centre of photosystem I. A special focus is dedicated to the results obtained combining time-resolved spectroscopic techniques, either difference absorption or electron paramagnetic resonance, with molecular genetics, which allows, through modification of the binding of redox active cofactors with the reaction centre subunits, an effect on their physical-chemical properties.  相似文献   

20.
The ability to catalyse an electrode reaction via direct (mediatorless) electron transfer has been demonstrated for a number of redox enzymes. In the case of mediatorless electron transfer, the electron is transferred directly from the electrode to the substrate molecule via the active site of the enzyme, or vice versa. The electron itself is the second substrate for the reaction. An important point characterizing bioelectrocatalysis is the catalytic removal of the reaction over-voltage. Therefore the enzyme attached to the electrode is able to catalyse electrode reaction and forms a 'molecular transducer'. The substrate can be detected by potentiometric measurement of the removal of reaction over-voltage. The enzyme laccase is able to catalyse the reaction of oxygen electroreduction. Therefore a laccase molecular layer attached to the electrode surface forms an oxygen transducer. The formation of the layer results in a change of the electrocatalytic feature of the electrode. Laccase label coupled with either ligand or receptor allows the detection of ligand-receptor complex formation/dissociation on the electrode surface. The detection is virtually reagentless. The substrates for the reaction are molecular oxygen and the electron itself. Numerous reagentless immunosensors of different formats (competitive, displacement and sandwich) have been developed, as well as the reagentless detection system for immunofiltration/immunochromatography.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号