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1.
Abstract— Addition of tyrosine or derivatives to aqueous solutions of flavins does not significantly impede either formation of the flavin triplet or the rate of O2 oxidation of the flavin radical generated by reaction of triplet with the phenol. However, the rate of radical decay is decreased. There is only a modest effect that results from altering the nature of the group on alkyl side chains of the flavin when the substituent, e.g. phenylalanine, does not complex avidly with the isoalloxazine system. However, when a tyrosyl or O-methyltyrosyl residue is covalently attached to an alkyl side chain at the N10-position of the flavin, the considerable intramolecular complexing that results markedly decreases the formation of flavin triplet and, therefore, the radical yield. The rate of triplet decay is not much different than for noninternally complexed flavins, but extensive intramolecular radical decay occurs, and the rate of 02 oxidation of radical is decreased. A shorter alkyl chain is more effective than a longer one for decreasing triplet production, but the greater proximity of a photooxidiz-able tyrosyl residue to the flavin nucleus within the former allows a slightly higher intramolecular radical yield. Attachment of a tyrosyl residue by a short chain from the N3-position of the flavin has only a modest effect on the production of flavin triplet and its decay. There is less radical production from internal than from external tyrosyl residues, and the rate of O2 oxidation of the flavin radical generated by such intermolecular photoreductants as N-acetyl tyrosine ethyl ester or EDTA is somewhat decreased. The tyrosyl residue within the active-site peptide of mitochondrial monoamine oxidase is not so susceptible to photooxidation by the 8α-(S-L-cysteinyl)flavin involved, since the thioether linkage at this position severely reduces triplet production. Upon oxidation of the thioether to sulfone, however, the triplet yield is partially restored. Some flavin radical can then be generated from either the intra- or an intermolecular tyrosyl residue. Taken together, these results demonstrate that tyrosyl residues near the flavin-binding sites of flavo-proteins can become oxidized by the flavin triplet that is light-generated unless the proximity and steric disposition of the interactants is such as to allow dissipation of much of the energy as radiationless decay within a tight complex or unless an 8α-thioether linkage to the flavin coenzyme is involved. Also, flavin radicals, whether generated photochemically or by biochemical oxidation of substrate, are readily oxidized by O2 in the presence of tyrosyl functions unless tight complexing occurs. More remarkable, though, is the decreased rate of radical decay conferred by the association with a tyrosyl residue. This stabilization of reactive flavin radicals may have considerable consequence in the catalytic mechanism of such enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
Redox-active tyrosine residues play important roles in long distance electron-transfer reactions in enzymes, including prostaglandin H synthase, ribonucleotide reductase, and photosystem II. In cytochrome c oxidase, a cross-linked tyrosine-histidine cofactor has been proposed to play a role in proton and electron transfer reactions. Studies of tyrosyl radicals in model compounds, generated by UV photolysis, have recently provided new information about the structure and function of these redox-active species. The results of these studies, which combine magnetic resonance and optical spectroscopies, are described in this review.  相似文献   

3.
Tyrosyl radicals are important in long-range electron transfer in several enzymes, but the protein environmental factors that control midpoint potential and electron-transfer rate are not well understood. To develop a more detailed understanding of the effect of protein sequence on their photophysical properties, we have studied the spectroscopic properties of tyrosyl radicals at 85 K. Tyrosyl radical was generated by UV-photolysis of pentapeptides in polycrystalline samples. The sequence of the pentapeptides was chosen to mimic peptide sequences found in redox-active tyrosine containing enzymes, ribonucleotide reductase and photosystem II. From EPR studies, we report that the EPR line shape of the tyrosyl radical depends on peptide sequence. We also present the first evidence for a component of the tyrosyl radical EPR signal, which decays on the seconds time scale at 85 K. We suggest that this transient results from a spontaneous, small conformational rearrangement in the radical. From FT-IR studies, we show that amide I vibrational bands (1680-1620 cm(-1)) and peptide bond skeletal vibrations (1230-1090 cm(-1)) are observed in the photolysis spectra of tyrosine-containing pentapeptides. From these data, we conclude that oxidation of the tyrosine aromatic ring perturbs the electronic structure of the peptide bond in tyrosine-containing oligopeptides. We also report sequence-dependent alterations in these bands. These results support the previous suggestion (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124, 5496) that spin delocalization can occur from the tyrosine aromatic ring into the peptide bond. We hypothesize that these sequence-dependent effects are mediated either by electrostatics or by changes in conformer preference in the peptides. Our findings suggest that primary structure influences the functional properties of redox-active tyrosines in enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of cation charge site on gas-phase ion/ion reactions between multiply protonated model peptides and singly charged anions has been examined. Insights are drawn from the quantitative examination of the product partitioning into competing channels, such as proton transfer (PT) versus electron transfer (ET), electron transfer followed by dissociation (ETD) versus electron transfer without dissociation (ET, no D), and fragmentation of backbone bonds versus fragmentation of side chains. Peptide cations containing protonated lysine, arginine, and histidine showed similar degrees of electron transfer, which were much higher than the peptide having fixed-charge sites, that is, trimethyl ammonium groups. Among the four types of cation charge sites, protonated histidine showed the highest degree of ET, no D, while no apparent intact electron-transfer products were observed for peptides with protonated lysine or arginine. All cation types showed side chain losses with arginine yielding the greatest fraction and lysine the smallest. The above trends were observed for each electron-transfer reagent. However, proton transfer was consistently higher with 1,3-dinitrobeznene anions, as was the fraction of side-chain losses. The partitioning of products among the various electron-transfer channels provides evidence for several of the mechanisms that have been proposed to account for electron-transfer dissociation and electron-capture dissociation. The simplest picture to account for all of the observations recognizes that several mechanisms can contribute to the observed products. Furthermore, the identity of the anionic reagent and the positions of the charge sites can affect the relative contributions of the competing mechanisms.  相似文献   

5.
Oxidative modifications to amino acid side chains can change the dissociation pathways of peptide ions, although these variations are most commonly observed when cysteine and methionine residues are oxidized. In this work we describe the very noticeable effect that oxidation of histidine residues can have on the dissociation patterns of peptide ions containing this residue. A common product ion spectral feature of doubly charged tryptic peptides is enhanced cleavage at the C-terminal side of histidine residues. This preferential cleavage arises as a result of the unique acid/base character of the imidazole side chain that initiates cleavage of a proximal peptide bond for ions in which the number of protons does not exceed the number of basic residues. We demonstrate here that this enhanced cleavage is eliminated when histidine is oxidized to 2-oxo-histidine because the proton affinity and nucleophilicity of the imidazole side chain are lowered. Furthermore, we find that oxidation of histidine to 2-oxo-histidine can cause the misassignment of oxidized residues when more than one oxidized isomer is simultaneously subjected to tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). These spectral misinterpretations can usually be avoided by using multiple stages of MS/MS (MS(n)) or by specially optimized liquid chromatographic separation conditions. When these approaches are not accessible or do not work, N-terminal derivatization with sulfobenzoic acid avoids the problem of mistakenly assigning oxidized residues.  相似文献   

6.
Redox-active tyrosine residues play important roles in long-distance electron reactions in enzymes, including prostaglandin H synthase, galactose oxidase, ribonucleotide reductase, and photosystem II. Magnetic resonance and vibrational spectroscopy provide methods with which to study the structures of redox-active amino acids in proteins. In this report, ultraviolet photolysis was used to generate tyrosyl radicals from polycrystalline tyrosinate or dipeptides, and the structure of the radical was investigated with EPR and reaction-induced FT-IR spectroscopy at 77 K. Photolysis at 77 K is expected to generate a neutral tyrosyl radical through oxidation of the aromatic ring. EPR and FT-IR results obtained from (13)C-labeled tyrosine were consistent with that expectation. Surprisingly, labeling of the tyrosyl amino group with (15)N also resulted in isotope-shifted bands in the photolysis spectrum. The force constant of a NH deformation mode increased when the tyrosyl radical was generated. These data suggest an interaction between the pi system of the tyrosyl radical and the amino group. In spectra acquired from the dipeptides, evidence for a sequence-dependent interaction between the tyrosyl radical and the amide bond of the dipeptide was also obtained. We postulate that perturbation of the amino or the amide/imide groups may occur through a spin polarization mechanism, which is indirectly detected as a change in NH force constant. This conclusion is supported by density functional calculations, which suggest a conformationally sensitive delocalization of spin density onto the amino and carboxylate groups of the tyrosyl radical. These experiments provide a step toward a detailed spectral interpretation for protein-based tyrosyl radicals.  相似文献   

7.
Redox-active tyrosine residues play important roles in long-distance electron reactions in enzymes such as prostaglandin H synthase, ribonucleotide reductase, and photosystem II (PSII). Spectroscopic characterization of tyrosyl radicals in these systems provides a powerful experimental probe into the role of the enzyme in mediation of long-range electron transfer processes. Interpretation of such data, however, relies critically on first establishing a spectroscopic fingerprint of isotopically labeled tyrosinate and tyrosyl radicals in nonenzymatic environments. In this report, FT-IR results obtained from tyrosinate, tyrosyl radical (produced by ultraviolet photolysis of polycrystalline tyrosinate), and their isotopologues at 77 K are presented. Assignment of peaks and isotope shifts is aided by density-functional B3LYP/6-311++G(3df,2p)//B3LYP/6-31++G(d,p) calculations of tyrosine and tyrosyl radical in several different charge and protonation states. In addition, characterization of the potential energy surfaces of tyrosinate and tyrosyl radical as a function of the backbone and ring torsion angles provides detailed insight into the sensitivity of the vibrational frequencies to conformational changes. These results provide a detailed spectroscopic interpretation, which will elucidate the structures of redox-active tyrosine residues in complex protein environments. Specific application of these data is made to enzymatic systems.  相似文献   

8.
The elementary mechanism of radical-mediated peptide tyrosine nitration, which is a hallmark of post-translational modification of proteins under nitrative stress in vivo, has been elucidated in detail by using an integrated approach that combines the gas-phase synthesis of prototypical molecular tyrosine-containing peptide radical cations, ion–molecule reactions, and isotopic labeling experiments with DFT calculations. This reaction first involves the radical recombination of .NO2 towards the prerequisite phenoxyl radical tautomer of a tyrosine residue, followed by proton rearrangements, finally yielding the stable and regioselective 3-nitrotyrosyl residue product. In contrast, nitration with the π-phenolic radical cation tautomer is inefficient. This first direct experimental evidence for the elementary steps of the radical-mediated tyrosine nitration mechanism in the gas phase provides a fundamental insight into the regioselectivity of biological tyrosine ortho-nitration.  相似文献   

9.
The hydrogen bond plays a vital role in structural arrangement, intermediate state stabilization, materials function, and biological activity of certain enzymatic reactions. The solvent and electronic effects on hydrogen bonds are illustrated employing the polarizable contimuum model at B3LYP/6–311++G(d,p) level. Geometry optimizations reflect the significant solvent and electronic effect. The proton departs spontaneously upon oxidation from the hydroxyl group of tyrosyl in hydrogen bonded Tyr⋯Asp⋯Arg triads in both gas phase and solvents. The electron transfer isomers are observed for anionic triads, no matter what the solvent is. The difference of distance between two hydrogen bonds is enlarged in solvent as compared to that in gas phase. The electronic effect on IR spectra is distinctive. The tyrosyl fragment tends to be oxidized and the arginine moiety is easier to bind an excess electron. The variations of chemical shift and spin-spin coupling constant are more significant upon electron transfer than upon solvent dielectric constant. The augmentation of solvent dielectric constant stabilizes the system, enhances the difference of isomers, and increases the vertical ionization potential and vertical electron affinity values.  相似文献   

10.
Density functional theory (B3LYP) has been applied to large models of the Fe(II)-Cu(I) binuclear center in cytochrome oxidase, investigating the mechanism of O-O bond cleavage in the mixed valence form of the enzyme. To comply with experimental information, the O(2) molecule is assumed to be bridging between iron and copper during the O-O bond cleavage, leading to the formation of a ferryl-oxo group and a cupric hydroxide. In accord with previous suggestions, the calculations show that it is energetically feasible to take the fourth electron needed in this reaction from the tyrosine residue that is cross-linked to one of the copper ligands, resulting in the formation of a neutral tyrosyl radical. However, the calculations indicate that simultaneous transfer of an electron and a proton from the tyrosine to dioxygen during bond cleavage leads to a barrier more than 10 kcal/mol higher than that experimentally determined. This may be overcome in two ways. If an extra proton in the binuclear center assists in the mechanism, the calculated reaction barrier agrees with experiment. Alternatively, the fourth electron might initially be supplied by a residue in the vicinity other than the tyrosine.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract— Flash photolysis spectra show that ultraviolet irradiation of RNase (Λ > 250 nm) at pH 11.5 generates the hydrated electron and a long-lived transient with absorption maxima at 390 nm and 410 nm, attributed to the phenoxyl type radical from tyrosyl residues. Comparison of the initial yields with flash photolysis spectra obtained from aqueous tyrosine and mixtures of the chromophoric amino acids indicates that 3–4 tyrosyl residues are photoionized in the primary act. This process is almost completely quenched at pH 1–9, even though the p -alanylphenoxyl radical is obtained with tyrosine over this pH range and the accompanying electron is observed at pH 7. The negative result is not altered by denaturation of RNase with 8 M urea or heating to 70°C, suggesting that a primary chain interaction is responsible for the suppression of tyrosyl residue photolysis. This mechanism is supported by flash photolysis spectra of small peptides, showing that the initial radical yield from tyrosylglycylglycine is strongly quenched compared to tyrosine when the phenolic group is protonated. Comparion of this work with published results on fluorescence and inactivation quantum yields indicates that photochemical electron ejection from RNase in alkaline solutions takes place in the dissociable residues and does not contribute to loss of enzymic activity.  相似文献   

12.
Tyrosyl radicals are important in long-range electron transfer in several enzymes, but the protein environmental factors that control midpoint potential and electron transfer rate are not well understood. To develop a more detailed understanding of the effect of protein sequence, we have performed 14N and 15N electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) measurements on tyrosyl radical, generated either in polycrystalline tyrosinate or in its 15N-labeled isotopomer, by UV photolysis. 14N-ESEEM was also performed on tyrosyl radical generated in tyrosine-containing pentapeptide samples. Simulation of the 14N- and 15N-tyrosyl radical ESEEM measurements yielded no significant isotropic hyperfine splitting to the amine or amide nitrogen; the amplitude of the anisotropic, nitrogen hyperfine coupling (0.21 MHz) was consistent with a dipole-dipole distance of 3.0 A. Density functional theory was used to calculate the isotropic and anisotropic hyperfine couplings to the amino nitrogen in four different tyrosyl radical conformers. Comparison with the simulated data suggested that the lowest energy radical conformer, generated in tyrosine at pH 11, has a 76 degrees Calpha-Cbeta-C1'-C2' ring and a -73 degrees C-Calpha-Cbeta-C1' backbone dihedral angle. In addition, the magnitude, orientation, and asymmetry of the nuclear quadrupole coupling tensor were derived from analysis of the tyrosyl radical 14N-ESEEM. The simulations showed differences in the coupling and orientation of the nuclear quadrupole tensor, when the tyrosinate and pentapeptide samples were compared. These results suggest sequence- or conformation-induced changes in the ionic character of the NH bond in different tyrosine-containing peptides.  相似文献   

13.
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 HPO(4)2- 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 HPO4(2-) is favored over water as the proton acceptor in part because the proton donor-acceptor distance is approximately 0.2 A 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.  相似文献   

14.
Fragmentation of some electrospray-generated complex ions, [63CuII(amine)M].2+, where M is an enkephalin derivative, produces the radical cation of the peptide, M.+. This ion has only been observed when M contains a tyrosyl or tryptophanyl residue plus a basic residue, typically arginyl or lysyl. A typical viable amine is diethylenetriamine. Collision-induced dissociation (CID) of the M.+ ion yields a prominent [M - 106].+ product ion for tyrosine-containing peptides, and a prominent [M - 129].+ ion for a tryptophan-containing peptide. These fragment ions are formed as a result of elimination of the tyrosyl and tryptophanyl side chains. Dissociation of these ions, in turn, produces second generation product ions, many of which are typically absent in the fragmentation of protonated peptide ions. Structures for some of these unusual ions are proposed.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated electron transfer between a tyrosyl radical and cysteine residue in two systems, oxyhemoglobin (oxyHb)/peroxynitrite/5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) and myoglobin (Mb)/hydrogen peroxide/DMPO, using a combination of techniques including ESR, immuno-spin trapping (IST), and ESI/MS. These techniques show that the nitrone spin trap DMPO covalently binds to one or more amino acid radicals in the protein. Treating oxyHb with peroxynitrite and Mb with H2O2 in the presence of a low DMPO concentration yielded secondary Cys-DMPO radical adduct exclusively, whereas in the presence of high DMPO, more of the primary Tyr-DMPO radical adduct was detected. In both systems studied, we found that, at high DMPO concentrations, mainly tyrosyl radicals (Hb-Tyr42/Tyr24 and Mb-Tyr103) are trapped and the secondary electron-transfer reaction does not compete, whereas in the presence of low concentrations of DMPO, the secondary reaction predominates over tyrosyl trapping, and a thiyl radical is formed and then trapped (Hb-Cys93 or Mb-Cys110). With increasing concentrations of DMPO in the reaction medium, primary radicals have an increasing probability of being trapped. MS/MS was used to identify the specific Tyr and Cys residues forming radicals in the myoglobin system. All data obtained from this combination of approaches support the conclusion that the initial site of radical formation is a Tyr, which then abstracts an electron from a cysteine residue to produce a cysteinyl radical. This complex phenomenon of electron transfer from one radical to another has been investigated in proteins by IST, ESR, and MS.  相似文献   

16.
Quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) methods, employing density functional theory (DFT), have been used to compute the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) parameters of tryptophan and tyrosyl radical intermediates involved in the catalytic cycle of Pleurotus eryngii versatile peroxidase (VP) and its W164Y variant, respectively. These radicals have been previously experimentally detected and characterized both in the two-electron and one-electron activated forms of the enzymes. In this work, the well-studied W164 radical in VP has been chosen for calibration purposes because its spectroscopic properties have been extensively studied by multifrequency EPR and ENDOR spectroscopies. Using a B3LYP/CHARMM procedure, appropriately accounting for electrostatic, such as hydrogen bonding, and steric environmental interactions, a good agreement between the calculated and measured EPR parameters for both radicals has been achieved; g-tensors, hyperfine coupling constants (hfcc) and Mulliken spin densities have been correlated to changes in geometries, hydrogen bond networks and electrostatic environment, with the aim of understanding the influence of the protein surroundings on EPR properties. In addition, the present calculations demonstrate, for VP, the formation of a neutral tryptophan radical, hydrogen bonded to the nearby E243, via a stepwise electron and proton transfer with earlier involvement of a short-lived tryptophan cationic species. Instead, for W164Y, the QM/MM dynamics simulation shows that the tyrosine oxidation proceeds via a concerted electron and proton transfer and is accompanied by a significant reorganization of residues and water molecules surrounding the tyrosyl radical.  相似文献   

17.
The coupling of electron and proton transfer is an important controlling factor in radical proteins, such as photosystem II, ribinucleotide reductase, cytochrome oxidases, and DNA photolyase. This was investigated in model complexes in which a tyrosine or tryptophan residue was oxidized by a laser-flash generated trisbipyridine-Ru(III) moiety in an intramolecular, proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reaction. The PCET was found to proceed in a competition between a stepwise reaction, in which electron transfer is followed by deprotonation of the amino acid radical (ETPT), and a concerted reaction, in which both the electron and proton are transferred in a single reaction step (CEP). Moreover, we found that we could analyze the kinetic data for PCET by Marcus' theory for electron transfer. By altering the solution pH, the strength of the Ru(III) oxidant, or the identity of the amino acid, we could induce a switch between the two mechanisms and obtain quantitative data for the parameters that control which one will dominate. The characteristic pH-dependence of the CEP rate (M. Sjodin et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 3932) reflects the pH-dependence of the driving force caused by proton release to the bulk. For the pH-independent ETPT on the other hand, the driving force of the rate-determining ET step is pH-independent and smaller. On the other hand, temperature-dependent data showed that the reorganization energy was higher for CEP, while the pre-exponential factors showed no significant difference between the mechanisms. Thus, the opposing effect of the differences in driving force and reorganization energy determines which of the mechanisms will dominate. Our results show that a concerted mechanism is in general quite likely and provides a low-barrier reaction pathway for weakly exoergonic reactions. In addition, the kinetic isotope effect was much higher for CEP (kH/kD > 10) than for ETPT (kH/kD = 2), consistent with significant changes along the proton reaction coordinate in the rate-determining step of CEP.  相似文献   

18.
The radical ion chemistry of a suite of S-nitrosopeptides has been investigated. Doubly and triply-protonated ions of peptides NYCGLPGEYWLGNDK, NYCGLPGEYWLGNDR, NYCGLPGERWLGNDR, NACGAPGEKWAGNDK, NYCGLPGEKYLGNDK, NYGLPGCEKWYGNDK and NYGLPGEKWYGCNDK were subjected to electron capture dissociation (ECD), and collision-induced dissociation (CID). The peptide sequences were selected such that the effect of the site of S-nitrosylation, the nature and position of the basic amino acid residues, and the nature of the other amino acid side chains, could be interrogated. The ECD mass spectra were dominated by a peak corresponding to loss of ?NO from the charge-reduced precursor, which can be explained by a modified Utah-Washington mechanism. Some backbone fragmentation in which the nitrosyl modification was preserved was also observed in the ECD of some peptides. Molecular dynamics simulations of peptide ion structure suggest that the ECD behavior was dependent on the surface accessibility of the protonated residue. CID of the S-nitrosylated peptides resulted in homolysis of the S?CN bond to form a long-lived radical with loss of ?NO. The radical peptide ions were isolated and subjected to ECD and CID. ECD of the radical peptide ions provided an interesting comparison to ECD of the unmodified peptides. The dominant process was electron capture without further dissociation (ECnoD). CID of the radical peptide ions resulted in cysteine, leucine, and asparagine side chain losses, and radical-induced backbone fragmentation at tryptophan, tyrosine, and asparagine residues, in addition to charge-directed backbone fragmentation.  相似文献   

19.
A ferrocene-quinone dyad (Fc-Q) with a rigid amide spacer and Fc-(Me)Q dyad, in which the amide proton acting as a hydrogen-bonding acceptor is replaced by the methyl group, are employed to examine the effects of hydrogen bonding on both the thermal and the photoinduced electron-transfer reactions. The hydrogen bonding of the semiquinone radical anion with the amide proton in Fc-Q(.-) produced by the electron-transfer reduction of Fc-Q is indicated by the significant positive shift of the one-electron reduction potential of Fc-Q. The hyperfine coupling constants of Fc-Q(.-) also indicate the existence of hydrogen bonding, agreeing with those predicted by the density functional calculation. The hydrogen-bonding dynamics in the photoinduced electron transfer from the ferrocene (Fc) to the quinone moiety (Q) in Fc-Q have been successfully detected in the femtosecond laser flash photolysis experiments. Thermal intramolecular electron transfer from Fc to Q in Fc-Q and Fc-(Me)Q also occurs efficiently in the presence of metal ions in acetonitrile at 298 K. The hydrogen bond formed between the semiquinone radical anion and the amide proton in Fc-Q results in remarkable acceleration of the rate of metal ion-promoted electron transfer as compared to the rate of Fc-(Me)Q in which hydrogen bonding is prohibited. The metal ion-promoted electron-transfer rates are well correlated with the binding energies of superoxide ion-metal ion complexes, which are derived from the g(zz) values of the ESR spectra.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of positive charge on the properties of ammonium and amide radicals were investigated by ab initio and density functional theory calculations with the goal of elucidating the energetics of electron capture dissociation (ECD) of multiply charged peptide ions. The electronic properties of the amide group in N-methylacetamide (NMA) are greatly affected by the presence of a remote charge in the form of a point charge, methylammonium, or guanidinium cations. The common effect of the remote charge is an increase of the electron affinity of the amide group, resulting in exothermic electron capture. The N-Calpha bond dissociation and transition state energies in charge-stabilized NMA anions are 20-50 kJ mol(-1) greater than in the hydrogen atom adduct. The zwitterions formed by electron capture have proton affinities that were calculated as 1030-1350 kJ mol(-1), and are sufficiently basic for the amide carbonyl to exothermically abstract a proton from the ammonium, guanidinium and imidazolium groups in protonated lysine, arginine, and histidine residues, respectively. A new mechanism is proposed for ECD of multiply charged peptide and protein cations in which the electron enters a charge-stabilized electronic state delocalized over the amide group, which is a superbase that abstracts a proton from a sterically proximate amino acid residue to form a labile aminoketyl radical that dissociates by N-Calpha bond cleavage. This mechanism explains the low selectivity of N-Calpha bond dissociations induced by electron capture, and is applicable to dissociations of peptide ions in which the charge carriers are metal ions or quaternary ammonium groups. The new amide superbase and the previously proposed mechanisms of ECD can be uniformly viewed as being triggered by intramolecular proton transfer in charge-reduced amide cation-radicals. In contrast, remote charge affects N-H bond dissociation in weakly bound ground electronic states of hypervalent ammonium radicals, as represented by methylammonium, CH3NH3*, but has a negligible effect on the N-H bond dissociation in the strongly bound excited electronic states. This refutes previous speculations that loss of "hot hydrogen" can occur from an excited state of an ammonium radical.  相似文献   

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