Publication | Closed Access
Tryptophan-Accelerated Electron Flow Through Proteins
400
Citations
20
References
2008
Year
BioelectrochemistryExcitation Energy TransferRedox BiologyIntervening Tryptophan ResidueProtein FoldingRedox ChemistryBiophysicsPhotochemistryBiochemistryMechanistic PhotochemistryPhysical ChemistryProtein TransportSingle-step Electron TunnelingMultistep Electron TunnelingNatural SciencesExperimental BiophysicsProtein EngineeringQuantum BiologyMolecular BiophysicsMedicineTryptophan-accelerated Electron Flow
Energy flow in biological structures often requires submillisecond charge transport over long molecular distances. Kinetics modeling suggests that charge-transfer rates can be greatly enhanced by multistep electron tunneling in which redox-active amino acid side chains act as intermediate donors or acceptors. We report transient optical and infrared spectroscopic experiments that quantify the extent to which an intervening tryptophan residue can facilitate electron transfer between distant metal redox centers in a mutant Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin. Cu(I) oxidation by a photoexcited Re(I)-diimine at position 124 on a histidine(124)-glycine(123)-tryptophan(122)-methionine(121) beta strand occurs in a few nanoseconds, fully two orders of magnitude faster than documented for single-step electron tunneling at a 19 angstrom donor-acceptor distance.
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