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Journal Article

Cluster-dependent charge-transfer dynamics in iron-sulfur proteins.

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Liou,  S. H.
Research Group of Electron Paramagnetic Resonance, MPI for Biophysical Chemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Mao, Z., Liou, S. H., Khadka, N., Jenney, F. E., Goodin, D. B., Seefeldt, L. C., et al. (2018). Cluster-dependent charge-transfer dynamics in iron-sulfur proteins. Biochemistry, 57(6), 978-990. doi:10.1021/acs.biochem.7b01159.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0000-C152-9
Abstract
Photoinduced charge-transfer dynamics and the influence of cluster size on the dynamics were investigated using five iron sulfur clusters: the 1Fe-4S cluster in Pyrococcus furiosus rubredoxin, the 2Fe-2S cluster in Pseudomonas putida putidaredoxin, the 4Fe-4S cluster in nitrogenase iron protein, and the 8Fe-7S P-cluster and the 7Fe-9S-1Mo FeMo cofactor in nitrogenase MoFe protein. Laser excitation promotes the iron sulfur clusters to excited electronic states that relax to lower states. The electronic relaxation lifetimes of the 1Fe-4S, 8Fe-7S, and 7Fe-9S-1Mo clusters are on the picosecond time scale, although the dynamics of the MoFe protein is a mixture of the dynamics of the latter two clusters. The lifetimes of the 2Fe-2S and 4Fe-4S clusters, however, extend to several nanoseconds. A competition between reorganization energies and the density of electronic states (thus electronic coupling between states) mediates the charge-transfer lifetimes, with the 2Fe-2S cluster of Pdx and the 4Fe-4S cluster of Fe protein lying at the optimum leading to them having significantly longer lifetimes. Their long lifetimes make them the optimal candidates for long-range electron transfer and as external photosensitizers for other photoactivated chemical reactions like solar hydrogen production. Potential electron-transfer and hole-transfer pathways that possibly facilitate these charge transfers are proposed.