Issue 43, 2008

The chemical mechanism of nitrogenase: hydrogen tunneling and further aspects of the intramolecular mechanism for hydrogenation of η2-N2 on FeMo-co to NH3

Abstract

The preceding paper (Dalton Trans., 2008, DOI: 10.1039/b806100a) describes the logical development of a chemical mechanism for the catalysis of hydrogenation of N2 to 2NH3 that occurs at the Fe7MoS9Nc(homocitrate) cofactor (FeMo-co) of the enzyme nitrogenase. The mechanism uses a single replenishable path for serial supply of protons which become H atoms on FeMo-co, migrating to become S–H and Fe–H donors to N2 and to the intermediates that follow. This chemical catalysis at FeMo-co is distinctly intramolecular: transition states and reaction profiles for the preferred 21 step pathway were presented. This paper describes a number of alternative intermediates and pathways that were considered in developing the mechanism. These results reveal further relevant principles of the reactivity of hydrogenated FeMo-co, and the reasons why these pathways are less likely to be part of the mechanism. The intramolecular character of the mechanism, and the relatively small distances over which H atoms transfer, lead to expectations of extensive quantum mechanical hydrogen tunneling as part of the catalytic rate enhancement. This possibility is supported by comparisons of reaction profiles with those for enzyme reactions for which tunneling is established.

Graphical abstract: The chemical mechanism of nitrogenase: hydrogen tunneling and further aspects of the intramolecular mechanism for hydrogenation of η2-N2 on FeMo-co to NH3

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Apr 2008
Accepted
14 Jul 2008
First published
24 Sep 2008

Dalton Trans., 2008, 5992-5998

The chemical mechanism of nitrogenase: hydrogen tunneling and further aspects of the intramolecular mechanism for hydrogenation of η2-N2 on FeMo-co to NH3

I. Dance, Dalton Trans., 2008, 5992 DOI: 10.1039/B806103C

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