Oxygen Economy of Cytochrome P450: What is the Origin of the Mixed Functionality as a Dehydrogenase-Oxidase Enzyme Compared with its Normal Function?

Devesh Kumar, Samuël P. De Visser, Sason Shaik

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The economy of dioxygen consumption by enzymes constitutes a fundamental problem in enzymatic chemistry (ref 1). Sometimes, the enzyme converts ALL the oxygen into water, without affecting the organic substrate, thereby acting as an "oxidase" (ref 1). Other times, the enzyme converts all the oxygen into water and causes desaturation in the substrate, thus exhibiting a mixed function as both "oxidase" and "dehydrogenase" (refs 2-5). The present paper describes density functional calculations demonstrating that the oxidase-dehydrogenase mixed activity occurs from the cationic intermediate species and requires electro-steric inhibition of the rebound process. Furthermore, the calculations reveal that the carbocation is formally nascent from an excited state of the active species of the enzyme (2Cpd I), in which the Fe=O moiety is singlet coupled as in the 1Δg state of dioxygen! Thus, our results resolve an important mechanism and reveal the factors that underlie its observability. Copyright © 2003 American Chemical Society.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)5072-5073
    Number of pages1
    JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
    Volume126
    Issue number16
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 28 Apr 2004

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