Abstract

The radical S-adenosyl methionine (SAM) enzyme superfamily has widespread roles in hydrogen atom abstraction reactions of crucial biological importance. In these enzymes, reductive cleavage of SAM bound to a [4Fe-4S]1+ cluster generates the 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical (5'-dAdo•) which ultimately abstracts an H atom from the substrate. However, overwhelming experimental evidence has surprisingly revealed an obligatory organometallic intermediate Ω exhibiting an Fe-C5'-adenosyl bond, whose properties are the target of this theoretical investigation. We report a readily applied, two-configuration version of broken symmetry DFT, denoted 2C-DFT, designed to allow the accurate description of the hyperfine coupling constants and g-tensors of an alkyl group bound to a multimetallic iron-sulfur cluster. This approach has been validated by the excellent agreement of its results both with those of multiconfigurational complete active space self-consistent field computations for a series of model complexes and with the results from electron nuclear double-resonance/electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic studies for the crystallographically characterized complex, M-CH3, a [4Fe-4S] cluster with a Fe-CH3 bond. The likewise excellent agreement between spectroscopic results and 2C-DFT computations for Ω confirm its identity as an organometallic complex with a bond between an Fe of the [4Fe-4S] cluster and C5' of the deoxyadenosyl moiety, as first proposed.

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