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Understanding the mechanism of short-range electron transfer using an immobilized cupredoxin
Authors:Stefano Monari  Gianantonio Battistuzzi  Carlo A Bortolotti  Sachiko Yanagisawa  Katsuko Sato  Chan Li  Isabelle Salard  Dorota Kostrz  Marco Borsari  Antonio Ranieri  Christopher Dennison  Marco Sola
Affiliation:Department of Chemistry, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Via Campi 183, 41125 Modena, Italy.
Abstract:The hydrophobic patch of azurin (AZ) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an important recognition surface for electron transfer (ET) reactions. The influence of changing the size of this region, by mutating the C-terminal copper-binding loop, on the ET reactivity of AZ adsorbed on gold electrodes modified with alkanethiol self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) has been studied. The distance-dependence of ET kinetics measured by cyclic voltammetry using SAMs of variable chain length, demonstrates that the activation barrier for short-range ET is dominated by the dynamics of molecular rearrangements accompanying ET at the AZ-SAM interface. These include internal electric field-dependent low-amplitude protein motions and the reorganization of interfacial water molecules, but not protein reorientation. Interfacial molecular dynamics also control the kinetics of short-range ET for electrostatically and covalently immobilized cytochrome c. This mechanism therefore may be utilized for short-distance ET irrespective of the type of metal center, the surface electrostatic potential, and the nature of the protein-SAM interaction.
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