Abstract

AbstractThe copper‐containing nitrite reductase (CuNiR) catalyzes the biological conversion of nitrite to nitric oxide; key long‐range electron/proton transfers are involved in the catalysis. However, the details of the electron‐/proton‐transfer mechanism are still unknown. In particular, the driving force of the electron transfer from the type‐1 copper (T1Cu) site to the type‐2 copper (T2Cu) site is ambiguous. Here, we explored the two possible proton‐transfer channels, the high‐pH proton channel and the primary proton channel, by using two‐layered ONIOM calculations. Our calculation results reveal that the driving force for electron transfer from T1Cu to T2Cu comes from a remote water‐mediated triple‐proton‐coupled electron‐transfer mechanism. In the high‐pH proton channel, the water‐mediated triple‐proton transfer occurs from Glu113 to an intermediate water molecule, whereas in the primary channel, the transfer is from Lys128 to His260. Subsequently, the two channels employ another two or three distinct proton‐transfer steps to deliver the proton to the nitrite substrate at the T2Cu site. These findings explain the detailed proton‐/electron‐transfer mechanisms of copper‐containing nitrite reductase and could extend our understanding of the diverse proton‐coupled electron‐transfer mechanisms in complicated proteins.

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