Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.40, No.15, 3656-3669, 2001
Geometric and electronic structure contributions to function in bioinorganic chemistry: Active sites in non-heme iron enzymes
Spectroscopy has played a major role in the definition of structure/function correlations in bioinoganic chemistry. The importance of spectroscopy combined with electronic structure calculations is clearly demonstrated by the non-heme iron enzymes. Many members of this large class of enzymes activate dioxygen using a ferrous active site that has generally been difficult to study with most spectroscopic methods. A new spectroscopic methodology has been developed utilizing variable temperature, variable field magnetic circulardichroism, which enables one to obtain detailed insight into the geometric and electronic structure of the non-heme ferrous active site and probe its reaction mechanism on a molecular level. This spectroscopic methodology is presented and applied to a number of key mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes leading to a general mechanistic strategy for O-2 activation. These studies are then extended to consider the new features present in the binuclear non-heme iron enzymes and applied to understand (1) the mechanism of the two electron/coupled proton transfer to dioxygen binding to a single iron center in hemerythrin and (2) structure/function correlations over the oxygen-activating enzymes stearoyl-ACP Delta (9)-desaturase, ribonucleotide reductase, and methane monooxygenase. Electronic structure/reactivity correlations for O-2 activation by non-heme relative to heme iron enzymes will also be developed.