화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.125, No.48, 14784-14792, 2003
Spectroscopic studies of the Met182Thr mutant of nitrite reductase: Role of the axial ligand in the geometric and electronic structure of blue and green copper sites
A combination of spectroscopic methods and density functional calculations has been used to describe the electronic structure of the axial mutant (Met182Thr) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides nitrite reductase in which the axial methionine has been changed to a threonine. This mutation results in a dramatic change in the geometric and electronic structure of the copper site. The electronic absorption data imply that the type 1 site in the mutant is like a typical blue copper site in contrast to the wild-type site, which is green. Similar ligand field strength in the mutant and the wild type (from MCD spectra) explains the similar EPR parameters for very different electronic structures. Resonance Raman shows that the Cu-S(Cys) bond is stronger in the mutant relative to the wild type. From a combination of absorption, CD, MCD, and EPR data, the loss of the strong axial thioether (present in the wild-type site) results in an increase of the equatorial thiolate-Cu interaction and the site becomes less tetragonal. Spectroscopically calibrated density functional calculations were used to provide additional insight into the role of the axial ligand. The calculations reproduce well the experimental ground-state bonding and the changes in going from a green to a blue site along this coupled distortion coordinate. Geometry optimizations at the weak and strong axial ligand limits show that the bonding of the axial thioether is the key factor in determining the structure of the ground state. A comparison of plastocyanin (blue), wild-type nitrite reductase (green), and the Met182Thr mutant (blue) sites enables evaluation of the role of the axial ligand in the geometric and electronic structure of type 1 copper sites, which can affect the electron-transfer properties of these sites.