Wherland Sandbox 2
From Proteopedia
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The studies discussed here involve the intramolecular electron transfer between a one electron reduced disulfide 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 electron transfer between a one electron reduced disulfide 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 | ||
- | <scene name='70/703985/Az_ss_site_expsoure/ | + | <scene name='70/703985/Az_ss_site_expsoure/2'>Cys 3-Cys 26</scene>. |
- | + | The reducing agent typically used is the CO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> radical, an especially strong reducing agent produced by pulse radiolysis of formate containing solutions. | |
- | + | ||
Revision as of 09:46, 9 July 2015
Intramolecular Electron Transfer in Azurin
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