In view of the depletion of fossil fuel reserves and climatic effects of greenhouse gas emissions, Ni,Fe-containing carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (Ni-CODH) enzymes have attracted increasing interest in recent years for their capability to selectively catalyze the reversible reduction of CO to CO (CO + 2H + 2e CO + HO). The possibility of converting the greenhouse gas CO into useful materials that can be used as synthetic building blocks or, remarkably, as carbon fuels makes Ni-CODH a very promising target for reverse-engineering studies. In this context, in order to provide insights into the chemical principles underlying the biological catalysis of CO activation and reduction, quantum mechanics calculations have been carried out in the framework of density functional theory (DFT) on different-sized models of the Ni-CODH active site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt was recently discovered that some redox proteins can thermodynamically and spatially split two incoming electrons towards different pathways, resulting in the one-electron reduction of two different substrates, featuring reduction potential respectively higher and lower than the parent reductant. This energy conversion process, referred to as electron bifurcation, is relevant not only from a biochemical perspective, but also for the ground-breaking applications that electron-bifurcating molecular devices could have in the field of energy conversion. Natural electron-bifurcating systems contain a two-electron redox centre featuring potential inversion (PI), i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemically synthesized compounds that are capable of facilitating the reversible splitting of dihydrogen into protons and electrons are rare in chemists' portfolio. The corresponding biocatalysts - hydrogenases - are, however, abundant in the microbial world. [NiFe]-hydrogenases represent a major subclass and display a bipartite architecture, composed of a large subunit, hosting the catalytic NiFe(CO)(CN) cofactor, and a small subunit whose iron-sulfur clusters are responsible for electron transfer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe potentials of redox systems involving nitrogen, oxygen, and metal ions of the first-row transition series have been computed according to the general approach of the grand canonical ensemble, which leads to the equilibrium value of the reduction potential via a (complete) sampling of configuration space at a given temperature. The approach is a single configuration approach in the sense that identical molecular structures are sampled for both the oxidized and reduced species considered in water solution. In this study, the solute and a cluster of 11-12 water molecules are treated explicitly at the same level of theory and embedded in a continuum solvent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe apparently simple dihydrogen formation from protons and electrons (2H + 2e ⇄ H) is one of the most challenging reactions in nature. It is catalyzed by metalloenzymes of amazing complexity, called hydrogenases. A better understanding of the chemistry of these enzymes, especially that of the [NiFe]-hydrogenases subgroup, has important implications for production of H as alternative sustainable fuel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF