Abstract

CarH is a cobalamin-based photoreceptor which has attracted significant interest due to its complex mechanism involving its organometallic coenzyme-B12 chromophore. While several experimental and computational studies have sought to understand CarH's mechanism of action, there are still many aspects of the mechanism which remain unclear. While light is needed to activate the Co-C5' bond, it is not entirely clear whether reaction pathway involves singlet or triplet diradical states. A recent experimental study implicated triplet pathway and importance of intersystem crossing (ISC) as a viable mechanistic route for photoproduct formation in CarH. Herein, a combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics approach (QM/MM) was used to explore the involvement of triplet states in CarH. Two possibilities were explored. The first possibility involved photo-induced homolytic cleavage of the Co-C5' where the radical pair (RP) would deactivate to a triplet state (T0) on the ground state potential energy surface (PES). However, a pathway for the formation of the photoproduct, 4',5'-anhydroadenosine (anhAdo), on the triplet ground state PES was not energetically feasible. The second possibility involved exploring a manifold of low-lying triplet excited states computed using TD-DFT within the QM/MM framework. Viable crossings of triplet excited states with singlet excited states were identified using semiclassical Landau-Zener theory and the effectiveness of spin-orbit coupling by El-Sayed rules. Several candidates along both the Co-NIm potential energy curve (PEC) and Co-C5'/Co-NIm PES were identified, which appear to corroborate experimental findings and implicate the possible role of triplet states in CarH.

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