4.5 Article

Intramolecular Charge-Assisted Hydrogen Bond Strength in Pseudochair Carboxyphosphate

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 119, Issue 3, Pages 1184-1191

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp506796r

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM08747]
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-1263279, CHE-1005145, CHE-1126465, CHE-0723109]
  3. Duquesne University
  4. Barry M. Goldwater Foundation
  5. Division Of Chemistry
  6. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1263279] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Carboxyphosphate, a suspected intermediate in ATP-dependent carboxylases, has not been isolated nor observed directly by experiment, Consequently, little is known concerning its structure, stability, and ionization state. Recently, carboxyphosphate as either a monoanion or dianion has been shown computationally to adopt a novel pseudochair conformation featuring an intramolecular charge-assisted hydrogen bond (CAHB). In this work, additive and subtractive correction schemes to the commonly employed open closed method are used to estimate the strength of the CAHB. Truhlar's Minnesota M06-2X functional with Dunning's aug-cc-pVTZ basis set has been used for geometry optimization, energy evaluation, and frequency analysis. The CHARMM force field has been used to approximate the Pauli repulsive terms in the closed and open forms of carboxyphosphate. From our additive correction scheme; differential Pauli repulsion contributions between the pseudochair (closed) and open conformations of carboxyphosphate are found to be significant in determining the CAHB strength. The additive correction modifies the CAHB prediction (Delta Eclosed-open) of 14 kcal/mol for the monoanion and 712 kcal/mol for the dianion to -22.9 and -18.4 kcal/mol; respectively. Results from the subtractive technique reinforce those from our additive procedure, where the predicted CAHB strength ranges from -17.8 to -25.4 kcal/mol for the monoanion and from -15.7 to -20.9 kcal/mol for the dianion. Ultimately, we find that the CAHB in carboxyphosphate meets the criteria for short-strong hydrogen bonds. However, carboxyphosphate has a unique energy profile that does not result in the symmetric double-well behavior of low-barrier hydrogen bonds. These findings provide deeper insight into the pseudo chair conformation Of carboxyphosphate, and lead to an improved mechanistic understanding of this intermediate in ATP-dependent carboxylases.

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