Buffer-Assisted Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer in a Model Rhenium−Tyrosine Complex

Hiroshi Ishikita, Alexander V. Soudackov, and Sharon Hammes-Schiffer*
Contribution from the Department of Chemistry, 104 Chemistry Building, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2007, 129 (36), pp 11146–11152
DOI: 10.1021/ja072708k
Publication Date (Web): August 18, 2007
Copyright © 2007 American Chemical Society

Abstract

Abstract Image

The mechanism for tyrosyl radical generation in the [Re(P−Y)(phen)(CO)3]PF6 complex is investigated with a multistate continuum theory for proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions. Both water and the phosphate buffer are considered as potential proton acceptors. The calculations indicate that the model in which the proton acceptor is the phosphate buffer species HPO42- can successfully reproduce the experimentally observed pH dependence of the overall rate and H/D kinetic isotope effect, whereas the model in which the proton acceptor is water is not physically reasonable for this system. The phosphate buffer species HPO42- is favored over water as the proton acceptor in part because the proton donor−acceptor distance is 0.2 Å smaller for the phosphate acceptor due to its negative charge. The physical quantities impacting the overall rate constant, including the reorganization energies, reaction free energies, activation free energies, and vibronic couplings for the various pairs of reactant/product vibronic states, are analyzed for both hydrogen and deuterium transfer. The dominant contribution to the rate arises from nonadiabatic transitions between the ground reactant vibronic state and the third product vibronic state for hydrogen transfer and the fourth product vibronic state for deuterium transfer. These contributions dominate over contributions from lower product states because of the larger vibronic coupling, which arises from the greater overlap between the reactant and product vibrational wave functions. These calculations provide insight into the fundamental mechanism of tyrosyl radical generation, which plays an important role in a wide range of biologically important processes.

Tools

SciFinder Links

SciFinder subscribers:  Click to sign in | Not a SciFinder subscriber? Learn more at www.cas.org

Explore by:


History

  • Published In Issue September 12, 2007
  • Received April 18, 2007

Recommend & Share

Related Content

Other ACS content by these authors: