Relation between the structure and spectroscopic properties of blue copper proteins

Kristine Pierloot, Jan O A De Kerpel, Ulf Ryde, Mats H M Olsson, Björn O. Roos

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The electronic spectra of three rhombic type 1 blue copper proteins, nitrite reductase, pseudoazurin, and cucumber basic protein, have been studied by ab initio multiconfigurational second-order perturbation theory (the CASPT2 method). The six lowest excitations have been calculated and assigned with an error of less than 1800 cm-1. The singly occupied orbital in the ground-state forms a strongly covalent antibond between the copper ion and the thiolate group of the cysteine ligand with a mixture of σ and π character. This is in contrast to the axial type 1 copper protein plastocyanin which has an almost pure Cu-S(Cys) π interaction. The two brightest lines in the absorption spectrum originate from transitions to the corresponding σ (~460 nm) and π (~600 mm) bonding orbitals. The relative intensity of these two lines is determined by the character of the ground- state orbital. It is possible to obtain a structure closely similar to the one found in nitrite reductase by geometry optimizations with the hybrid density functional B3LYP method in vacuum. It is a tetragonal structure with bonds of mainly σ character to the four ligands like normal square-planar Cu(II) complexes, but the cysteine thiolate group donates much charge to the copper ion and thereby makes the structure strongly distorted toward a tetrahedron. Both this structure and a trigonal π-bonded structure, which also can be obtained for all complexes and is an excellent model of plastocyanin, are equilibrium structures (although usually not with the same ligand models). They have virtually the same energy (within ~7 kJ/mol), and the barrier between them is low. Therefore, small differences in the structure and electrostatics of different proteins may lead to stabilization of one or the other of the structures. The results indicate that axial type 1 proteins have a trigonal structure with an almost pure Cu-S(Cys) π bond, whereas rhombic type 1 proteins have tetragonal structures with a significant σ character in this bond. Type 1.5 and 2 copper-cysteinate proteins arise when the tetragonal structure becomes more flattened than in nitrite reductase, probably by the inclusion of stronger (type 1.5) and more (type 2) ligands.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)13156-13166
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume120
Issue number50
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1998 Dec 23

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Theoretical Chemistry (including Computational Chemistry)

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