Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.137, No.16, 5381-5389, 2015
How Formaldehyde Inhibits Hydrogen Evolution by [FeFe]-Hydrogenases: Determination by C-13 ENDOR of Direct Fe-C Coordination and Order of Electron and Proton Transfers
Formaldehyde (HCHO), a strong electrophile and a rapid and reversible inhibitor of hydrogen production by [FeFe]-hydrogenases, is used to identify the point in the catalytic cycle at which a highly reactive metal-hydrido species is formed. Investigations of the reaction of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii [FeFe]-hydrogenase with formaldehyde using pulsed-EPR techniques including electron-nuclear double resonance spectroscopy establish that formaldehyde binds close to the active site. Density functional theory calculations support an inhibited super-reduced state having a short Fe-C-13 bond in the 2Fe subsite. The adduct forms when HCHO is available to compete with H+ transfer to a vacant, nucleophilic Fe site: had H+ transfer already occurred, the reaction of HCHO with the Fe-hydrido species would lead to methanol, release of which is not detected. Instead, Fe-bound formaldehyde is a metal-hydrido mimic, a locked, inhibited form analogous to that in which two electrons and only one proton have transferred to the H-cluster. The results provide strong support for a mechanism in which the fastest pathway for H-2 evolution involves two consecutive proton transfer steps to the H-cluster following transfer of a second electron to the active site.