Intramolecular Electron Transfer in Azurin

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(Intramolecular (disulfide radical to Cu) electron transfer studies of Azurin from pulse radiolysis)
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==Intramolecular Electron Transfer in Azurin==
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<StructureSection load='4azu' size='350' side='right' scene='70/703985/Azurin_intro/5' caption='Ps. aeruginosa Azurin (PDB code [[4azu]]) ' >
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<StructureSection load='4azu' size='350' side='right' scene='70/703985/Azurin_intro/5' caption='Ps. aeruginosa Azurin ' >
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The studies discussed here involve the intramolecular ET between a one electron reduced disulfide anion radical and the oxidized copper ion. In order to measure the rate constant for this process, the disulfide radical must be produced rapidly by a strong reductant in a bimolecular reaction. This bimolecular reaction must reduce the disulfide preferentially over the Cu<sup>2+</sup> site. Azurin shows this preferential reactivity due to the lack of exposure of the copper site, with only part of the edge of the <scene name='70/703985/Az_cu_site_expsoure/1'>His 117exposed</scene> coupled with high exposure of the disulfide
The studies discussed here involve the intramolecular ET between a one electron reduced disulfide anion radical and the oxidized copper ion. In order to measure the rate constant for this process, the disulfide radical must be produced rapidly by a strong reductant in a bimolecular reaction. This bimolecular reaction must reduce the disulfide preferentially over the Cu<sup>2+</sup> site. Azurin shows this preferential reactivity due to the lack of exposure of the copper site, with only part of the edge of the <scene name='70/703985/Az_cu_site_expsoure/1'>His 117exposed</scene> coupled with high exposure of the disulfide
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<scene name='70/703985/Az_ss_site_expsoure/2'>Cys 3-Cys 26</scene>.
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<scene name='70/706737/Az_ss_site_exposure/3'>Cys 3-Cys 26</scene>.
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The reducing agent typically used is the CO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> anion radical, an especially strong reducing agent produced by pulse radiolysis of formate containing solutions. Thus the electrostatic interaction with the sites is also relevant. The <scene name='70/703985/Az_cu_site_expsoure_charges/1'>copper site</scene> has no charges near the exposed His46 but the disulfide site <scene name='70/703985/Az_ss_site_expsoure_charges/1'>disulfide site</scene> has both a positive residue (Lys 27) and a negative one (Glu 2)nearby.
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The reducing agent typically used is the CO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> anion radical, an especially strong reducing agent produced by pulse radiolysis of formate containing solutions. Thus the electrostatic interaction with the sites is also relevant. The <scene name='70/703985/Az_cu_site_expsoure_charges/1'>copper site</scene> has no charges near the exposed His46 but the disulfide site <scene name='70/703985/Az_ss_site_expsoure_charges/1'>disulfide site</scene> has both a positive residue (Lys 27) and a negative one (Glu 2) nearby.
== Electron transfer path ==
== Electron transfer path ==
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The most extreme modification of the Cu binding site of azurin, again by Yi Lu and coworkers, was to create the di-copper Cu<sub>A</sub> <scene name='70/703985/Azurin_purple/1'>site</scene> of ''Pseudomonas denitrificans'' cytochrome oxidase in azurin. In this transformation the Cu binding loop CSELCGINHAL replaced CTF_P_GHSAL of ''Pseudomonas aeruginosa'' azurin. The Cu<sub>A</sub> site is also the site of reduction of cytochrome oxidase. The reactivity of this site, for single electron reduction, was established by the same method as used for the other azurin mutants <ref>Enhanced rate of intramolecular electron transfer in an engineered purple CuA azurin. Farver, O., Lu, Y., Ang, M. C., & Pecht, I. (1999). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 96(3), 899-902. ['''http://dx.doi.org/DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.3.899''' DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.3.899]</ref>. Depending on pH, the site can have its single unpaired electron delocalized (mixed valence, pH 4) or localized on a single Cu (trapped valence, pH 8). The site is about a factor of 3 more reactive than the type 1 azurin site, when compared at pH 5, even though the driving force for the reaction is somewhat less. The estimate for the reorganization energy of the Cu<sub>A</sub> site is slightly lower than that of a type 1 center.
The most extreme modification of the Cu binding site of azurin, again by Yi Lu and coworkers, was to create the di-copper Cu<sub>A</sub> <scene name='70/703985/Azurin_purple/1'>site</scene> of ''Pseudomonas denitrificans'' cytochrome oxidase in azurin. In this transformation the Cu binding loop CSELCGINHAL replaced CTF_P_GHSAL of ''Pseudomonas aeruginosa'' azurin. The Cu<sub>A</sub> site is also the site of reduction of cytochrome oxidase. The reactivity of this site, for single electron reduction, was established by the same method as used for the other azurin mutants <ref>Enhanced rate of intramolecular electron transfer in an engineered purple CuA azurin. Farver, O., Lu, Y., Ang, M. C., & Pecht, I. (1999). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 96(3), 899-902. ['''http://dx.doi.org/DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.3.899''' DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.3.899]</ref>. Depending on pH, the site can have its single unpaired electron delocalized (mixed valence, pH 4) or localized on a single Cu (trapped valence, pH 8). The site is about a factor of 3 more reactive than the type 1 azurin site, when compared at pH 5, even though the driving force for the reaction is somewhat less. The estimate for the reorganization energy of the Cu<sub>A</sub> site is slightly lower than that of a type 1 center.
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</StructureSection>
== References ==
== References ==
<references/>
<references/>

Current revision

Ps. aeruginosa Azurin (PDB code 4azu)

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References

  1. Electron transfer in blue copper proteins. Farver, O.; Pecht, I. Coord. Chem. Rev. 2011, 255(7-8), 757-773. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/J.CCR.2010.08.005 DOI: 10.1016/J.CCR.2010.08.005]
  2. Electron-tunneling pathways in proteins. Beratan, D. N., Onuchic, J. N., Winkler, J. R., & Gray, H. B. (1992). Science, 258(5089), 1740-1741.[http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1334572 DOI: 10.1126/science.1334572]
  3. Long-range electron transfer in engineered azurins exhibits Marcus inverted region behavior. Farver, O., Hosseinzadeh, P., Marshall, N. M., Wherland, S., Lu, Y., & Pecht, I. (2015). Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 6(1), 100-105. [http://dx.doi.org/DOI: 10.1021/jz5022685 DOI: 10.1021/jz5022685]
  4. Enhanced rate of intramolecular electron transfer in an engineered purple CuA azurin. Farver, O., Lu, Y., Ang, M. C., & Pecht, I. (1999). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 96(3), 899-902. [http://dx.doi.org/DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.3.899 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.3.899]

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