4.2 Article

Rejigging Electron and Proton Transfer to Transition between Dioxygenase, Monooxygenase, Peroxygenase, and Oxygen Reduction Activity: Insights from Bioinspired Constructs of Heme Enzymes

Journal

JACS AU
Volume 1, Issue 9, Pages 1296-1311

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacsau.1c00100

Keywords

Bioinspired electrodes; Electron transfer and proton transfer; catalysis; monooxygenase and dioxygenase; oxidases; peroxidase and peroxygenase

Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology, Government of India [SERB/EMR-0008063, STR/2019/000081]

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Research over the years has shown that the enzymatic activities of heme enzymes can be branched by regulating the lifetime and population of intermediates, as well as by tuning electron and proton transfer steps, to navigate through different catalytic pathways.
Nature has employed heme proteins to execute a diverse set of vital life processes. Years of research have been devoted to understanding the factors which bias these heme enzymes, with all having a heme cofactor, toward distinct catalytic activity. Among them, axial ligation, distal super structure, and substrate binding pockets are few very vividly recognized ones. Detailed mechanistic investigation of these heme enzymes suggested that several of these enzymes, while functionally divergent, use similar intermediates. Furthermore, the formation and decay of these intermediates depend on proton and electron transfer processes in the enzyme active site. Over the past decade, work in this group, using in situ surface enhanced resonance Raman spectroscopy of synthetic and biosynthetic analogues of heme enzymes, a general idea of how proton and electron transfer rates relate to the lifetime of different O-2 derived intermediates has been developed. These findings suggest that the enzymatic activities of all these heme enzymes can be integrated into one general cycle which can be branched out to different catalytic pathways by regulating the lifetime and population of each of these intermediates. This regulation can further be achieved by tuning the electron and proton transfer steps. By strategically populating one of these intermediates during oxygen reduction, one can navigate through different catalytic processes to a desired direction by altering proton and electron transfer steps.

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