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11.
Fundamental aspects of proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions in solution are analyzed with molecular dynamics simulations for a series of model systems. The analysis addresses the impact of the solvent reorganization energy, the proton donor-acceptor mode vibrational frequency, and the distance dependence of the nonadiabatic coupling on the dynamics of the reaction and the magnitude of the rate. The rate for nonadiabatic PCET is expressed in terms of a time-dependent probability flux correlation function. The time dependence of the probability flux correlation function is determined mainly by the solvent reorganization energy and is not significantly influenced by the proton donor-acceptor frequency or the distance dependence of the nonadiabatic coupling. The magnitude of the PCET rate becomes greater as the solvent reorganization energy decreases, the proton donor-acceptor frequency decreases, and the distance dependence of the nonadiabatic coupling increases. The approximations underlying a previously derived analytical PCET rate expression are also investigated. The short-time approximation for the solvent is valid for these types of systems. In addition, solvent damping effects on the proton donor-acceptor motion are not significant on the time scale of the probability flux. The rates calculated from the molecular dynamics simulations agree well with those calculated from the analytical rate expression.  相似文献   
12.
Recent advances in the theoretical treatment of proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions are reviewed. These reactions play an important role in a wide range of biological processes, as well as in fuel cells, solar cells, chemical sensors, and electrochemical devices. A unified theoretical framework has been developed to describe both sequential and concerted PCET, as well as hydrogen atom transfer (HAT). A quantitative diagnostic has been proposed to differentiate between HAT and PCET in terms of the degree of electronic nonadiabaticity, where HAT corresponds to electronically adiabatic proton transfer and PCET corresponds to electronically nonadiabatic proton transfer. In both cases, the overall reaction is typically vibronically nonadiabatic. A series of rate constant expressions have been derived in various limits by describing the PCET reactions in terms of nonadiabatic transitions between electron-proton vibronic states. These expressions account for the solvent response to both electron and proton transfer and the effects of the proton donor-acceptor vibrational motion. The solvent and protein environment can be represented by a dielectric continuum or described with explicit molecular dynamics. These theoretical treatments have been applied to numerous PCET reactions in solution and proteins. Expressions for heterogeneous rate constants and current densities for electrochemical PCET have also been derived and applied to model systems.  相似文献   
13.
An extension of the Anderson-Newns-Schmickler model for electrochemical proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) is presented. This model describes reactions in which electron transfer between a solute complex in solution and an electrode is coupled to proton transfer within the solute complex. The model Hamiltonian is derived in a basis of electron-proton vibronic states defined within a double adiabatic approximation for the electrons, transferring proton, and bath modes. The interaction term responsible for electronic transitions between the solute complex and the electrode depends on the proton donor-acceptor vibrational mode within the solute complex. This model Hamiltonian is used to derive the anodic and cathodic rate constants for nonadiabatic electrochemical PCET. The derivation is based on the master equations for the reduced density matrix of the electron-proton subsystem, which includes the electrons of the solute complex and the electrode, as well as the transferring proton. The rate constant expressions differ from analogous expressions for electrochemical electron transfer because of the summation over electron-proton vibronic states and the dependence of the couplings on the proton donor-acceptor vibrational motion. These differences lead to additional contributions to the total reorganization energy, an additional exponential temperature-dependent prefactor, and a temperature-dependent term in the effective activation energy that has different signs for the anodic and cathodic processes. This model can be generalized to describe both nonadiabatic and adiabatic electrochemical PCET reactions and provides the framework for the inclusion of additional effects, such as the breaking and forming of other chemical bonds.  相似文献   
14.
15.
This paper presents a general theoretical formulation for proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions. The solute is represented by a multistate valence bond model, and the active electrons and transferring proton(s) are treated quantum mechanically. This formulation enables the classical or quantum mechanical treatment of the proton donor-acceptor vibrational mode, as well as the dynamical treatment of the proton donor-acceptor mode and the solvent. Nonadiabatic rate expressions are presented for PCET reactions in a number of well-defined limits for both dielectric continuum and molecular representations of the environment. The dynamical rate expressions account for correlations between the fluctuations of the proton donor-acceptor distance and the nonadiabatic PCET coupling. The quantities in the rate expressions can be calculated with a dielectric continuum model or a molecular dynamics simulation of the full system. The significance of the quantum and dynamical effects of the proton donor-acceptor mode is illustrated with applications to model PCET systems.  相似文献   
16.
The proton-coupled electron transfer reaction catalyzed by soybean lipoxygenase-1 is studied with a multistate continuum theory that represents the transferring hydrogen nucleus as a quantum mechanical wave function. The inner-sphere reorganization energy of the iron cofactor is calculated with density functional theory, and the outer-sphere reorganization energy of the protein is calculated with the frequency-resolved cavity model for conformations obtained with docking simulations. Both classical and quantum mechanical treatments of the proton donor-acceptor vibrational motion are presented. The temperature dependence of the calculated rates and kinetic isotope effects is in agreement with the experimental data. The weak temperature dependence of the rates is due to the relatively small free energy barrier arising from a balance between the reorganization energy and the reaction free energy. The unusually high deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 81 is due to the small overlap of the reactant and product proton vibrational wave functions and the dominance of the lowest energy reactant and product vibronic states in the tunneling process. The temperature dependence of the kinetic isotope effect is strongly influenced by the proton donor-acceptor distance with the dominant contribution to the overall rate. This dominant proton donor-acceptor distance is significantly smaller than the equilibrium donor-acceptor distance and is determined by a balance between the larger coupling and the smaller Boltzmann probability as the distance decreases. Thus, the proton donor-acceptor vibrational motion plays a vital role in decreasing the dominant donor-acceptor distance relative to its equilibrium value to facilitate the proton-coupled electron transfer reaction.  相似文献   
17.
The dynamical behavior and the temperature dependence of the kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) are examined for the proton-coupled electron transfer reaction catalyzed by the enzyme soybean lipoxygenase. The calculations are based on a vibronically nonadiabatic formulation that includes the quantum mechanical effects of the active electrons and the transferring proton, as well as the motions of all atoms in the complete solvated enzyme system. The rate constant is represented by the time integral of a probability flux correlation function that depends on the vibronic coupling and on time correlation functions of the energy gap and the proton donor-acceptor mode, which can be calculated from classical molecular dynamics simulations of the entire system. The dynamical behavior of the probability flux correlation function is dominated by the equilibrium protein and solvent motions and is not significantly influenced by the proton donor-acceptor motion. The magnitude of the overall rate is strongly influenced by the proton donor-acceptor frequency, the vibronic coupling, and the protein/solvent reorganization energy. The calculations reproduce the experimentally observed magnitude and temperature dependence of the KIE for the soybean lipoxygenase reaction without fitting any parameters directly to the experimental kinetic data. The temperature dependence of the KIE is determined predominantly by the proton donor-acceptor frequency and the distance dependence of the vibronic couplings for hydrogen and deuterium. The ratio of the overlaps of the hydrogen and deuterium vibrational wavefunctions strongly impacts the magnitude of the KIE but does not significantly influence its temperature dependence. For this enzyme reaction, the large magnitude of the KIE arises mainly from the dominance of tunneling between the ground vibronic states and the relatively large ratio of the overlaps between the corresponding hydrogen and deuterium vibrational wavefunctions. The weak temperature dependence of the KIE is due in part to the dominance of the local component of the proton donor-acceptor motion.  相似文献   
18.
Theoretical studies of proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions for model systems provide insight into fundamental concepts relevant to bioenergetics. A dynamical theoretical formulation for vibronically nonadiabatic PCET reactions has been developed. This theory enables the calculation of rates and kinetic isotope effects, as well as the pH and temperature dependences, of PCET reactions. Methods for calculating the vibronic couplings for PCET systems have also been developed and implemented. These theoretical approaches have been applied to a wide range of PCET reactions, including tyrosyl radical generation in a tyrosine-bound rhenium polypyridyl complex, phenoxyl/phenol and benzyl/toluene self-exchange reactions, and hydrogen abstraction catalyzed by the enzyme lipoxygenase. These applications have elucidated some of the key underlying physical principles of PCET reactions. The tools and concepts derived from these theoretical studies provide the foundation for future theoretical studies of PCET in more complex bioenergetic systems such as Photosystem II.  相似文献   
19.
The multistate empirical valence bond (MS-EVB) model, which was developed for molecular dynamics simulations of proton transport in water and biomolecular systems, is extended for the modeling of protonatable amino acid residues in aqueous environments, specifically histidine and glutamic acid. The parameters of the MS-EVB force field are first determined to reproduce the geometries and energetics of the gas phase amino acid-water clusters. These parameters are then optimized to reproduce experimental pK(a) values. The free energy profiles for acid ionization and the corresponding pK(a) values are calculated by MS-EVB molecular dynamics simulations utilizing the umbrella sampling technique, with the center of excess charge coordinate chosen as the dissociation reaction coordinate. A general procedure for fitting the MS-EVB parameters is formulated, which allows for the parametrization of other amino acid residues with protonatable groups and the subsequent use of the MS-EVB approach for molecular dynamics simulations of proton transfer processes in proteins involving protonation/deprotonation of the protonatable amino acid groups.  相似文献   
20.
Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHOD) catalyzes the only redox reaction in the pathway for pyrimidine biosynthesis. In this reaction, a proton is transferred from a carbon atom of the substrate to a serine residue, and a hydride is transferred from another carbon atom of the substrate to a cofactor. The deprotonation of the substrate is postulated to involve a proton relay mechanism along a hydrogen bonding pathway in the active site. In this paper, molecular dynamics simulations are used to identify and characterize potential hydrogen bonding pathways that could facilitate the redox reaction catalyzed by human DHOD. The observed pathways involve hydrogen bonding of the active base serine to a water molecule, which is hydrogen bonded to the substrate carboxylate group or a threonine residue. The threonine residue is positioned to enable proton transfer to another water molecule leading to the bulk solvent. The impact of mutating the active base serine to cysteine is also investigated. This mutation is found to increase the average donor-acceptor distances for proton and hydride transfer and to disrupt the hydrogen bonding pathways observed for the wild-type enzyme. These effects could lead to a significant decrease in enzyme activity, as observed experimentally for the analogous mutant in Escherichia coli DHOD.  相似文献   
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