| Literature DB >> 17985883 |
Kosh P Neupane1, Kristie Gearty, Ashish Francis, Jason Shearer.
Abstract
Nickel superoxide dismutase (NiSOD) is a bacterial metalloenzyme that possesses a mononuclear Ni-center and catalyzes the disproportionation of O2*- by cycling between NiII and NiIII oxidation states. Herein we present evidence from several SOD active metallopeptide maquettes ([Ni(SODM2H(1)X)]; SODM2H(1)X = H2N-XCDLPCG-COOH; X = H, D, or A) that the Ni-center of NiSOD most likely remains five-coordinate during SOD catalysis using thin-film voltammetry. N3- and CN- titration studies suggest that O2*- disproportionation by [Ni(SODM2H(1)X)] proceeds via an outersphere mechanism. Computationally derived values for the nuclear reorganization energy of the [NiII(SODM2)]/[NiIII(SODM2)] self-exchange reaction combined with the experimentally determined value for ko ( approximately 450 s-1) suggest that axial ligation enhances the O2*- disproportionation reaction in [Ni(SODM2)] (and NiSOD by analogy) by optimizing the NiII/NiIII redox couple such that it is close to the midpoint of the O2*- reduction and oxidation couples.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17985883 DOI: 10.1021/ja0731625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419