| Literature DB >> 26974184 |
Luke MacAleese1, Sylvain Hermelin2, Krystel El Hage3, Pierre Chouzenoux1, Alexander Kulesza1, Rodolphe Antoine1, Luigi Bonacina2, Markus Meuwly3, Jean-Pierre Wolf2, Philippe Dugourd1.
Abstract
Charge transfer mechanisms lay at the heart of chemistry and biochemistry. Proton coupled electron transfers (PCET) are central in biological processes such as photosynthesis and in the respiratory chain, where they mediate long-range charge transfers. These mechanisms are normally difficult to harness experimentally due to the intrinsic complexity of the associated biological systems. Metal-peptide cations experience both electron and proton transfers upon photoexcitation, proving an amenable model system to study PCET. We report on a time-resolved experiment designed to follow this dual charge transfer kinetics in [HG3W+Ag](+) (H = histidine, G = glycine, W = tryptophan) on time scales ranging from femtoseconds to milliseconds. While electron transfer completes in less than 4 ps, it triggers a proton transfer lasting over hundreds of microseconds. Molecular dynamics simulations show that conformational dynamic plays an important role in slowing down this reaction. This combined experimental and computational approach provides a view of PCET as a single phenomenon despite its very wide time-domain span.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26974184 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b12587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419