Abstract

To explore the possibility of electron transport in a recently designed four-helix bundle protein (Cochran, F. V.; et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 1346), we have computed the reorganization free energy for (i) oxidation of a single Ru-porphyrin cofactor and (ii) electron self-exchange between two Ru-porphyrin cofactors binding to the solvated protein. Sampling the classical electrostatic energy gap for 20 ns, we find that the fluctuations are well described by Gaussian statistics and obtain reorganization free energies of 0.90 +/- 0.04 eV for oxidation and 1.36 +/- 0.08 eV for self-exchange. The latter is 0.1-0.2 eV higher than the experimental estimate for interprotein electron self-exchange in cytochrome b5. As in natural electron carriers, inner-sphere reorganization is very small, 88 meV for self-exchange between two model cofactors computed at the density functional level of theory. Decomposing the outer-sphere reorganization free energy, we find that the solvent (aqueous ionic solution) is the primary outer-sphere medium for oxidation, contributing 0.60 eV (69%). The protein contributes only 0.27 eV (31%). For self-exchange, the solvent contribution, 0.68 eV (54%), and the protein contribution, 0.59 eV (46%), are almost equally important. The large solvent contribution is due to the slow decay of dipole reorientation of the solvent as a function of distance to the cofactor, implying that the change in the electric field upon electron transfer is not as effectively screened by the four-helix bundle protein. However, ranking the residues according to their free energy contributions, it is suggested that the reorganization free energy can be decreased by about 0.2 eV if two glutamine residues in the vicinity of the cofactor are mutated into less polar amino acids.

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