Publication | Open Access
Direct Detection and Characterization of Chloride in the Active Site of the Low-pH Form of Sulfite Oxidase Using Electron Spin Echo Envelope Modulation Spectroscopy, Isotopic Labeling, and Density Functional Theory Calculations
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Citations
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References
2009
Year
EngineeringDirect DetectionElectron SpinComputational ChemistryChemistryRedox BiologySpectra-structure CorrelationCl IsotopesAnalytical ChemistryRedox ChemistryBiophysicsBiochemistryEnvelope ModulationActive SiteLow-ph FormPhysical ChemistryQuantum ChemistryNatural SciencesProton TransferHydrogen BondDeoxygenation
Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) investigations were carried out on samples of the low-pH (lpH) form of vertebrate sulfite oxidase (SO) prepared with (35)Cl- and (37)Cl-enriched buffers, as well as with buffer containing the natural abundance of Cl isotopes. The isotope-related changes observed in the ESEEM spectra provide direct and unequivocal evidence that Cl(-) is located in close proximity to the Mo(V) center of lpH SO. The measured isotropic hyperfine interaction constant of about 4 MHz ((35)Cl) suggests that the Cl(-) ion is either weakly coordinated to Mo(V) at its otherwise vacant axial position, trans to the oxo ligand, or is hydrogen-bonded to the equatorial exchangeable OH ligand. Scalar relativistic all-electron density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the hyperfine and nuclear quadrupole interaction parameters, along with steric and energetic arguments, strongly support the possibility that Cl(-) is hydrogen-bonded to the equatorial OH ligand rather than being directly coordinated to the Mo(V).
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