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Published September 3, 2013 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Axial interactions in the mixed-valent Cu_A active site and role of the axial methionine in electron transfer

Abstract

Within Cu-containing electron transfer active sites, the role of the axial ligand in type 1 sites is well defined, yet its role in the binuclear mixed-valent Cu_A sites is less clear. Recently, the mutation of the axial Met to Leu in a Cu_A site engineered into azurin (Cu_A Az) was found to have a limited effect on E^0 relative to this mutation in blue copper (BC). Detailed low-temperature absorption and magnetic circular dichroism, resonance Raman, and electron paramagnetic resonance studies on Cu_A Az (WT) and its M123X (X = Q, L, H) axial ligand variants indicated stronger axial ligation in M123L/H. Spectroscopically validated density functional theory calculations show that the smaller ΔE^0 is attributed to H_2O coordination to the Cu center in the M123L mutant in Cu_A but not in the equivalent BC variant. The comparable stabilization energy of the oxidized over the reduced state in Cu_A and BC (Cu_A ∼ 180 mV; BC ∼ 250 mV) indicates that the S(Met) influences E(0) similarly in both. Electron delocalization over two Cu centers in Cu_A was found to minimize the Jahn-Teller distortion induced by the axial Met ligand and lower the inner-sphere reorganization energy. The Cu-S(Met) bond in oxidized Cu_A is weak (5.2 kcal/mol) but energetically similar to that of BC, which demonstrates that the protein matrix also serves an entatic role in keeping the Met bound to the active site to tune down E^0 while maintaining a low reorganization energy required for rapid electron transfer under physiological conditions.

Additional Information

© 2013 National Academy of Sciences. Contributed by Edward I. Solomon, July 30, 2013 (sent for review May 31, 2013) This work was funded by National Science Foundation Grants CHE-0948211 (to E.I.S.) and CHE-1058959 (to Y.L.) and National Institutes of Health Grant DK-31450 (to E.I.S.). M.-L.T. received support from the Postdoctoral Research Abroad Program sponsored by the National Science Council, Taiwan (Republic of China), and R.G.H. acknowledges a Gerhard Casper Stanford Graduate Fellowship and the Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation. Author contributions: M.-L.T., R.G.H., Y.L., and E.I.S. designed research; M.-L.T., R.G.H., N.M.M., and T.D.W. performed research; N.M.M., T.D.W., and Y.L. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; M.-L.T., R.G.H., Y.L., and E.I.S. analyzed data; and M.-L.T., R.G.H., and E.I.S. wrote the paper. The authors declare no conflict of interest. This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1314242110/-/DCSupplemental.

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Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023