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Control of the Electronic Ground State on an Electron‐Transfer Copper Site by Second‐Sphere Perturbations
Author(s) -
Morgada Marcos N.,
Abriata Luciano A.,
Zitare Ulises,
AlvarezPaggi Damian,
Murgida Daniel H.,
Vila Alejandro J.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
angewandte chemie international edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.831
H-Index - 550
eISSN - 1521-3773
pISSN - 1433-7851
DOI - 10.1002/anie.201402083
Subject(s) - electron transfer , thermus thermophilus , ground state , copper , chemistry , electron transport chain , population , chemical physics , electron , crystallography , atomic physics , photochemistry , physics , biochemistry , quantum mechanics , organic chemistry , escherichia coli , sociology , gene , demography
The Cu A center is a dinuclear copper site that serves as an optimized hub for long‐range electron transfer in heme–copper terminal oxidases. Its electronic structure can be described in terms of a σ u * ground‐state wavefunction with an alternative, less populated ground state of π u symmetry, which is thermally accessible. It is now shown that second‐sphere mutations in the Cu A containing subunit of Thermus thermophilus ba 3 oxidase perturb the electronic structure, which leads to a substantial increase in the population of the π u state, as shown by different spectroscopic methods. This perturbation does not affect the redox potential of the metal site, and despite an increase in the reorganization energy, it is not detrimental to the electron‐transfer kinetics. The mutations were achieved by replacing the loops that are involved in protein–protein interactions with cytochrome c , suggesting that transient protein binding could also elicit ground‐state switching in the oxidase, which enables alternative electron‐transfer pathways.