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Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase

[Image: see text] Nitrogenase is a fascinating enzyme in biology that reduces dinitrogen from air to ammonia through stepwise reduction and protonation. Despite it being studied in detail by experimental and computational groups, there are still many unknown factors in the catalytic cycle of nitroge...

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Autores principales: Barchenko, Maxim, O’Malley, Patrick J., de Visser, Sam P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10498488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37650683
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c02089
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author Barchenko, Maxim
O’Malley, Patrick J.
de Visser, Sam P.
author_facet Barchenko, Maxim
O’Malley, Patrick J.
de Visser, Sam P.
author_sort Barchenko, Maxim
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Nitrogenase is a fascinating enzyme in biology that reduces dinitrogen from air to ammonia through stepwise reduction and protonation. Despite it being studied in detail by experimental and computational groups, there are still many unknown factors in the catalytic cycle of nitrogenase, especially related to the addition of protons and electrons and their order. A recent biomimetic study characterized a potential dinitrogen-bridged diiron cluster as a synthetic model of nitrogenase. Using strong acid and reductants, the dinitrogen was converted into ammonia molecules, but details of the mechanism remains unknown. In particular, it was unclear from the experimental studies whether the proton and electron transfer steps are sequential or alternating. Moreover, the work failed to establish what the function of the diiron core is and whether it split into mononuclear iron fragments during the reaction. To understand the structure and reactivity of the biomimetic dinitrogen-bridged diiron complex [(P(2)(P′Ph)FeH)(2)(μ-N(2))] with triphenylphosphine ligands, we performed a density functional theory study. Our computational methods were validated against experimental crystal structure coordinates, Mössbauer parameters, and vibrational frequencies and show excellent agreement. Subsequently, we investigated the alternating and consecutive addition of electrons and protons to the system. The calculations identify a number of possible reaction channels, namely, same-site protonation, alternating protonation, and complex dissociation into mononuclear iron centers. The calculations show that the overall mechanism is not a pure sequential set of electron and proton transfers but a mixture of alternating and consecutive steps. In particular, the first reaction steps will start with double proton transfer followed by an electron transfer, while thereafter, there is another proton transfer and a second electron transfer to give a complex whereby ammonia can split off with a low energetic barrier. The second channel starts with alternating protonation of the two nitrogen atoms, whereafter the initial double proton transfer, electrons and protons are added sequentially to form a hydrazine-bound complex. The latter split off ammonia spontaneously after further protonation. The various reaction channels are analyzed with valence bond and orbital diagrams. We anticipate the nitrogenase enzyme to operate with mixed alternating and consecutive protonation and electron transfer steps.
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spelling pubmed-104984882023-09-14 Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase Barchenko, Maxim O’Malley, Patrick J. de Visser, Sam P. Inorg Chem [Image: see text] Nitrogenase is a fascinating enzyme in biology that reduces dinitrogen from air to ammonia through stepwise reduction and protonation. Despite it being studied in detail by experimental and computational groups, there are still many unknown factors in the catalytic cycle of nitrogenase, especially related to the addition of protons and electrons and their order. A recent biomimetic study characterized a potential dinitrogen-bridged diiron cluster as a synthetic model of nitrogenase. Using strong acid and reductants, the dinitrogen was converted into ammonia molecules, but details of the mechanism remains unknown. In particular, it was unclear from the experimental studies whether the proton and electron transfer steps are sequential or alternating. Moreover, the work failed to establish what the function of the diiron core is and whether it split into mononuclear iron fragments during the reaction. To understand the structure and reactivity of the biomimetic dinitrogen-bridged diiron complex [(P(2)(P′Ph)FeH)(2)(μ-N(2))] with triphenylphosphine ligands, we performed a density functional theory study. Our computational methods were validated against experimental crystal structure coordinates, Mössbauer parameters, and vibrational frequencies and show excellent agreement. Subsequently, we investigated the alternating and consecutive addition of electrons and protons to the system. The calculations identify a number of possible reaction channels, namely, same-site protonation, alternating protonation, and complex dissociation into mononuclear iron centers. The calculations show that the overall mechanism is not a pure sequential set of electron and proton transfers but a mixture of alternating and consecutive steps. In particular, the first reaction steps will start with double proton transfer followed by an electron transfer, while thereafter, there is another proton transfer and a second electron transfer to give a complex whereby ammonia can split off with a low energetic barrier. The second channel starts with alternating protonation of the two nitrogen atoms, whereafter the initial double proton transfer, electrons and protons are added sequentially to form a hydrazine-bound complex. The latter split off ammonia spontaneously after further protonation. The various reaction channels are analyzed with valence bond and orbital diagrams. We anticipate the nitrogenase enzyme to operate with mixed alternating and consecutive protonation and electron transfer steps. American Chemical Society 2023-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10498488/ /pubmed/37650683 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c02089 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Barchenko, Maxim
O’Malley, Patrick J.
de Visser, Sam P.
Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase
title Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase
title_full Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase
title_fullStr Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase
title_full_unstemmed Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase
title_short Mechanism of Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia in a Diiron Model of Nitrogenase
title_sort mechanism of nitrogen reduction to ammonia in a diiron model of nitrogenase
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10498488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37650683
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c02089
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