Hydrogen tunneling and protein motion in enzyme reactions.
Journal
  Accounts of chemical research.
Citation
  Acc Chem Res. 39(2):93-100
Publication date
  2006 Feb
Authors
  Hammes-Schiffer S
Grant agencies
  National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Grants
  NIGMS GM56207
Abstract
  Theoretical perspectives on hydrogen transfer reactions in enzymes are presented. The proton-coupled electron transfer reaction catalyzed by soybean lipoxygenase and the hydride transfer reaction catalyzed by dihydrofolate reductase are discussed. The first reaction is nonadiabatic and involves two distinct electronic states, while the second reaction is predominantly adiabatic and occurs on the electronic ground state. Theoretical studies indicate that hydrogen tunneling and protein motion play significant roles in both reactions. In both cases, the proton donor-acceptor distance decreases relative to its equilibrium value to enable efficient hydrogen tunneling. Equilibrium thermal motions of the protein lead to conformational changes that facilitate hydrogen transfer, but the nonequilibrium dynamical aspects of these motions have negligible impact.