Light-Activated Electron Transfer and Turnover in Ru-Modified Aldehyde Deformylating Oxygenases.
Rajneesh K BainsJessica J MillerHannah K van der RoestSheng QuBrad LuteJeffrey J WarrenPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2018)
Conversion of biological molecules into fuels or other useful chemicals is an ongoing chemical challenge. One class of enzymes that has received attention for such applications is aldehyde deformylating oxygenase (ADO) enzymes. These enzymes convert aliphatic aldehydes to the alkanes and formate. In this work, we prepared and investigated ADO enzymes modified with RuII(tris-diimine) photosensitizers as a starting point for probing intramolecular electron transfer events. Three variants were prepared, with RuII-modification at the wild type (WT) residue C70, at the R62C site in one mutant ADO, and at both C62 and C70 in a second mutant ADO protein. The single-site modification of WT ADO at C70 using a cysteine-reactive label is an important observation and opens a way forward for new studies of electron flow, mechanism, and redox catalysis in ADO. These Ru-ADO constructs can perform the ADO catalytic cycle in the presence of light and a sacrificial reductant. In this work, the Ru photosensitizer serves as a tethered, artificial reductase that promotes turnover of aldehyde substrates with different carbon chain lengths. Peroxide side products were detected for shorter chain aldehydes, concomitant with less productive turnover. Analysis using semiclassical electron transfer theory supports proposals for hopping pathway for electron flow in WT ADO and in our new Ru-ADO proteins.