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Hidden histidine radical rearrangements upon electron transfer to gas-phase peptide ions. Experimental evidence and theoretical analysis
Authors:Turecek Frantisek  Jones Jace W  Towle Tyrell  Panja Subhasis  Nielsen Steen Brøndsted  Hvelplund Preben  Paizs Bela
Affiliation:Department of Chemistry, Bagley Hall, Box 351700, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-1700, USA. turecek@chem.washington.edu
Abstract:Protonated peptides containing histidine or arginine residues and a free carboxyl group (His-Ala-Ile, His-Ala-Leu, Ala-His-Leu, Ala-Ala-His-Ala-Leu, His-Ala-Ala-Ala-Leu, and Arg-Ala-Ile) form stable anions upon collisional double electron transfer from Cs atoms at 50 keV kinetic energies. This unusual behavior is explained by hidden rearrangements occurring in peptide radical intermediates formed by transfer of the first electron. The rearrangements occur on a approximately 120 ns time scale determined by the radical flight time. Analysis of the conformational space for (His-Ala-Ile + H)(+) precursor cations identified two major conformer groups, 1a(+)-1m(+) and 5a(+)-5h(+) , that differed in their H-bonding patterns and were calculated to collectively account for 39% and 60%, respectively, of the gas-phase ions. One-electron reduction in 1a(+) and 5a(+) triggers exothermic hydrogen atom migration from the terminal COOH group onto the His imidazole ring, forming imidazoline radical intermediates. The intermediate from 5a is characterized by its charge and spin distribution as a novel cation radical-COO(-) salt bridge. The intermediate from 1a undergoes spontaneous isomerization by imidazoline N-H migration, re-forming the COOH group and accomplishing exothermic isomerization of the initial (3H)-imidazole radical to a (2H)-imidazole radical. An analogous unimolecular isomerization in simple imidazole and histidine radicals requires activation energies of 150 kJ mol(-1), and its occurrence in 1a and 5a is due to the promoting effect of the proximate COOH group. The rearrangement is substantially reduced in Ala-Leu-His due to an unfavorable spatial orientation of the imidazole and COOH groups and precluded in the absence of a free carboxyl group in His-Ala-Leu amide. In contrast to His-Ala-Ile and Arg-Ala-Ile, protonated Lys-Ala-Ile does not produce stable anions upon double electron transfer. The radical trapping properties of histidine residues are discussed.
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