posted on 2015-02-10, 00:00authored byYan Li, Miroslav Hodak, J. Bernholc
Copper-containing
nitrite reductases (CuNiRs) catalyze the reduction
of nitrite to nitric oxide, a key step in the denitrification process
that maintains balance between organic and inorganic nitrogen. Despite
their importance, their functioning is not well understood. In this
work, we carry out first-principles calculations and show that the
available structural data are consistent only with a single mechanism.
For this mechanism, we determine the activation energies, transition
states, and minimum energy pathways of CuNiR. The calculations lead
to an updated enzymatic mechanism and resolve several controversial
issues. In particular, our work identifies the origins of the two
protons necessary for the enzymatic function and shows that the transformation
from the initial O-coordination of substrate to the final N-coordination
of product is achieved by electron transfer from T1 copper to T2 copper,
rather than by the previously reported side-on coordination of a NO
intermediate, which only takes place in the reduced enzyme. We also
examine the role of structural change in the critical residue Asp98, reported in one experimental study, and find that while
the structural change affects the energetics of substrate attachment
and product release at the T2 copper reaction center, it does not
significantly affect the activation energy and reaction pathways of
the nitrite reduction process.