4.6 Article

Protonation processes and electronic spectra of histidine and related ions

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 111, Issue 20, Pages 4340-4352

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp067280a

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A full structural assignment of the neutral, protonated, and deprotonated histidine conformers in the gas phase is presented. A total of 3024 unique trial structures were generated by all combinations of internal single-bond rotamers of these species and optimized at the B3LYP/6-311G* level and further optimized at the B3LYP/6-311++G** level. A set of unique conformers is found, and their relative energies, free energies, dipole moments, rotational constants, electron affinities, ionization energies, and harmonic frequencies are determined. The population ratio of histidine and its tautomer is 1:0.16 at 298 K. Massive conformational changes are observed due to protonation and deprotonation, and the intramolecular H-bonds are characterized with the atoms in molecules theory. The calculated proton dissociation energy, gas-phase acidity, proton affinity, and gas-phase basicity are in excellent agreement with the experiments. The deprotonation and protonation of gaseous histidine both occur on the imidazole ring, explaining the versatile biofunctions of histidine in large biomolecules. The UV spectra of neutral and singly and doubly protonated histidine are investigated with the TDDFT/B3LYP/6-311+G(2df,p) calculations. The S-0-S-1, S-0-S-2, and S-0-S-3 excitations of histidine are mixed pi pi*/n pi* transitions at 5.37, 5.44, and 5.69 eV, respectively. The three excitation energies for histidine tautomer are 4.85, 5.47, and 5.52 eV, respectively. The three excitations for protonated histidine are mainly n pi* transitions at 5.45, 5.67, and 5.82 eV, respectively. The S-0-S-1 excitation of protonated histidine produces ImH-C beta H2-C alpha H(COOH)-NH2+, while the S-0-S-2 and S-0-S-3 transitions produce ImH-C beta H2-C alpha H(NH2)-(COOH)(+). These data may help to understand the mechanisms of the UV fragmentation of biomolecules.

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