Abstract

Radicals are highly reactive, short-lived chemical species that normally react indiscriminately with biological materials, and yet, nature has evolved thousands of enzymes that employ radicals to catalyze thermodynamically challenging chemistry. How these enzymes harness highly reactive radical intermediates to steer the catalysis to the correct outcome is a topic of intense investigation. Here, the results of detailed QM/MM calculations on archetype radical B12-enzymes are presented that provide new insights into how these enzymes control the reactivity of radicals within their active sites. The catalytic cycle in B12-enzymes is initiated through the formation of the 5'-deoxyadenosyl (Ado˙) moiety, a primary carbon-centred radical, which must migrate up to 8 Å to reach the target substrate to engage in the next step of the catalytic process, a hydrogen atom abstraction. Our calculations reveal that Ado˙ within the protein environment exhibits an unusual non-Aufbau electronic structure in which the singly occupied molecular orbital is lower in energy than the doubly occupied orbitals, an uncommon phenomenon known as SOMO-HOMO inversion (SHI). We find that the magnitude of SHI in the initially formed Ado˙ is larger compared to when the Ado˙ is near the intended substrate, leading to the former being relatively less reactive. The modulation of the SHI originates from Coulombic interactions of a quantum nature between a negative charge on a conserved glutamate residue and the spin on the Ado˙. Our findings support a novel hypothesis that these enzymes utilize this quantum Coulombic effect as a means of maintaining exquisite control over the chemistry of highly reactive radical intermediates in enzyme active sites.

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