Collman Group

20+ years of excellence in metalloporphyrin chemistry

 

Homepage

Publications

People

Professor Collman

Naturally Dangerous

 

 

 

 

 

Biomimetic studies of cytochrome c oxidase.

 

·        Heme/Cu terminal oxidases (i.e., cytochrome c oxidase and ubiquinol oxidase) make aerobic life on Earth possible by catalyzing four-electron four-proton reduction of molecular oxygen to water. The biomimetic approach has proven quite productive in understanding the role that the distal Cu ion plays in O2 reduction at the catalytic site of heme/Cu terminal oxidases.

 

·        Steady-state reduction of O2 is studied by rotating ring-disk voltammetry. We have developed techniques that allow us to carry out catalysis when electrons are readily available and when arrival of electrons is slow compared to the reduction of bound O2 to the redox level of H2O (the latter reproduces the biological kinetics of electron flux to cytochrome c oxidase).

·        We studied catalytic O2 reduction by our biomimetic heme/Cu analogs in the bimetallic, FeCu and Cu-free forms, under both an excess of electrons and a slow flux of electrons from the electrode to the catalyst. Through these comparisons we determined that the distal Cu ion appears to serve mainly as an electron storage site, so that when electrons are readily accessible, the activation barrier for O2 reduction at the heme is not affected by Cu.

·        Even though Cu does not appear to chemically affect the main catalytic pathway, it still modifies the reactivity of the heme. Specifically, it stabilizes the heme-O2 adduct against irreversible autooxidation, which releases, superoxide, a species that is toxic. Cu also decreases the affinity of the heme to CN- and CO, so that the bimetallic catalyst is up to 5 times more resistant to inhibition by these poisons than the Cu-free analogs.