The cleavage of [4Fes4S]-type clusters is thought to be important in proteins such as FesS scaffold proteins and nitrogenase. However, most [4Fes4S]2+ clusters in proteins have two antiferromagnetically coupled high-spin layers in which a minority spin is delocalized in each layer, thus forming a symmetric Fe2.5+sFe2.5+ pair, and how cleavage occurs between the irons is puzzling because of the shared electron. Previously, we proposed a novel mechanism for the fission of a [4Fes4S] core into two [2Fes2S] cores in which the minority spin localizes on one iron, thus breaking the symmetry and creating a transition state with two Fe3+sFe2+ pairs. Cleavage first through the weak Fe2+sS bonds lowers the activation energy. Here, we propose a test of this mechanism: break the symmetry of the cluster by changing the ligands to promote spin localization, which should enhance reactivity. The cleavage reactions for the homoligand [Fe4S4L4]2- (L ) SCH3, Cl, H) and heteroligand [Fe4S4(SCH3)2L2]2- (L ) Cl, H) clusters in the gas phase were examined via broken-symmetry density functional theory calculations. In the heteroligand clusters, the minority spin localized on the iron coordinated by the weaker electron-donor ligand, and the reaction energy and activation barrier of the cleavage were lowered, which is in accord with our proposed mechanism and consistent with photoelectron spectroscopy and collision-induced dissociation experiments. These studies suggest that proteins requiring facile fission of their [4Fes4S] cluster in their biological function might have spin-localized [4Fes4S] clusters.
Revised: January 7, 2011 |
Published: May 14, 2009
Citation
Niu S., and T. Ichiye. 2009.Cleavage of [4Fe-4S]-Type Clusters: Breaking the Symmetry.Journal of Physical Chemistry A 113, no. 19:5710-5717. doi:10.1021/jp900402y