Spectroscopic and Computational Study of a Nonheme Iron Nitrosyl Center in a Biosynthetic Model of Nitric Oxide Reductase |
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Authors: | Dr. Saumen Chakraborty Julian Reed Matthew Ross Dr. Mark J. Nilges Igor D. Petrik Dr. Soumya Ghosh Prof. Dr. Sharon Hammes‐Schiffer Prof. Dr. J. Timothy Sage Prof. Dr. Yong Zhang Prof. Dr. Charles E. Schulz Prof. Dr. Yi Lu |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign, Urbana, IL (USA);2. Department of Physics, Northeastern University, Boston, MA (USA);3. Department of Chemistry, Chemical Biology and Biomedical Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ (USA);4. Department of Physics, Knox College, Galesburg, IL (USA) |
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Abstract: | A major barrier to understanding the mechanism of nitric oxide reductases (NORs) is the lack of a selective probe of NO binding to the nonheme FeB center. By replacing the heme in a biosynthetic model of NORs, which structurally and functionally mimics NORs, with isostructural ZnPP, the electronic structure and functional properties of the FeB nitrosyl complex was probed. This approach allowed observation of the first S=3/2 nonheme {FeNO}7 complex in a protein‐based model system of NOR. Detailed spectroscopic and computational studies show that the electronic state of the {FeNO}7 complex is best described as a high spin ferrous iron (S=2) antiferromagnetically coupled to an NO radical (S= 1/2) [Fe2+‐NO.]. The radical nature of the FeB‐bound NO would facilitate N? N bond formation by radical coupling with the heme‐bound NO. This finding, therefore, supports the proposed trans mechanism of NO reduction by NORs. |
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Keywords: | computational chemistry EPR spectroscopy heme proteins iron reaction mechanisms |
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