Replacing a Cysteine Ligand by Selenocysteine in a [NiFe]-Hydrogenase Unlocks Hydrogen Production Activity and Addresses the Role of Concerted Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer in Electrocatalytic Reversibility

在[NiFe]-氢化酶中用硒代半胱氨酸取代半胱氨酸配体可激活产氢活性,并揭示协同质子耦合电子转移在电催化可逆性中的作用

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Abstract

Hydrogenases catalyze hydrogen/proton interconversion that is normally electrochemically reversible (having minimal overpotential requirement), a special property otherwise almost exclusive to platinum metals. The mechanism of [NiFe]-hydrogenases includes a long-range proton-coupled electron-transfer process involving a specific Ni-coordinated cysteine and the carboxylate of a nearby glutamate. A variant in which this cysteine has been exchanged for selenocysteine displays two distinct changes in electrocatalytic properties, as determined by protein film voltammetry. First, proton reduction, even in the presence of H(2) (a strong product inhibitor), is greatly enhanced relative to H(2) oxidation: this result parallels a characteristic of natural [NiFeSe]-hydrogenases which are superior H(2) production catalysts. Second, an inflection (an S-shaped "twist" in the trace) appears around the formal potential, the small overpotentials introduced in each direction (oxidation and reduction) signaling a departure from electrocatalytic reversibility. Concerted proton-electron transfer offers a lower energy pathway compared to stepwise transfers. Given the much lower proton affinity of Se compared to that of S, the inflection provides compelling evidence that concerted proton-electron transfer is important in determining why [NiFe]-hydrogenases are reversible electrocatalysts.

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