Simulations of the Large Kinetic Isotope Effect and the Temperature Dependence of the Hydrogen Atom Transfer in Lipoxygenase
- 11 February 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 126 (9) , 2820-2828
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja037233l
Abstract
Elucidating the role of nuclear quantum mechanical (NQM) effects in enzyme catalysis is a topic of significant current interest. Despite the great experimental progress in this field it is important to have theoretical approaches capable of evaluating and analyzing nuclear quantum mechanical contributions to catalysis. In this study, we use the catalytic reaction of lipoxygenase, which is characterized by an extremely large kinetic isotope effect, as a challenging test case for our simulation approach. This is done by applying the quantum classical path (QCP) method with an empirical valence bond potential energy surface. Our computational strategy evaluates the relevant NQM corrections and reproduces the large observed kinetic isotope effect and the temperature dependence of the H atom transfer reaction while being less successful with the D atom transfer reaction. However, the main point of our study is not so much to explore the temperature dependence of the isotope effect but rather to develop and validate an approach for calculations of nuclear quantum mechanical contributions to activation free energies. Here, we find that the deviation between the calculated and observed activation free energies is small for both H and D at all investigated temperatures. The present study also explores the nature of the reorganization energy in the enzyme and solution reactions. It is found that the outer-sphere reorganization energy is extremely small. This reflects the fact that the considered reaction involves a very small charge transfer. The implication of this finding is discussed in the framework of the qualitative vibronic model. The main point of the present study is, however, that the rigorous QCP approach provides a reliable computational tool for evaluating NQM contributions to catalysis even when the given reaction includes large tunneling contributions. Interestingly, our results indicate that the NQM effects in the lipoxygenase reaction are similar in the enzyme and in the reference solution reactions, and thus do not contribute to catalysis. We also reached similar conclusions in studies of other enzymes.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Catalytic Reaction Mechanism of Lipoxygenase. A Density Functional Theory StudyThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2003
- Proton and hydrogen atom tunnelling in hydrolytic and redox enzyme catalysisCanadian Journal of Chemistry, 1999
- The Reorganization Energy of Cytochrome c RevisitedThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 1997
- The structure and function of lipoxygenaseCurrent Opinion in Structural Biology, 1994
- A quantized classical path approach for calculations of quantum mechanical rate constantsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1993
- Quantum corrections for rate constants of diabatic and adiabatic reactions in solutionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1990
- Dispersed Polaron Simulations of Electron Transfer in Photosynthetic Reaction CentersScience, 1989
- Density-functional exchange-energy approximation with correct asymptotic behaviorPhysical Review A, 1988
- Simulation of free energy relationships and dynamics of SN2 reactions in aqueous solutionJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1988
- Chemical and Electrochemical Electron-Transfer TheoryAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 1964