Ligand effects on reactivity of hydride-decorated and reduced multi-iron compounds

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $276,893 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Title: Ligand effects on reactivity of hydride-decorated and reduced multi-iron compounds Abstract Metal cluster cofactors provide substrates with many potential orientations to bind and subsequently undergo chemical transformations. This is particularly true for cluster cofactors that activate small molecule substrates. The focus of this proposal is on the chemistry of the iron-molybdenum cofactor in the molybdenum-dependent nitrogenases, which catalyzes the eight electron and eight proton reduction of dinitrogen and two protons to generate two equivalents of ammonia and one of dihydrogen. The current mechanism proposed for the conversion of N2 to NH3 by this enzyme uses concepts that are common to numerous other metal cofactors, such as the protonation of bridging sulfide donors, the use of metal hydrides to store reducing equivalents, and the potential to coordinate the hydrides and dinitrogen in either terminal or bridging modes. How the iron-molybdenum cofactor binds hydride donors and dinitrogen, as well as intermediates during the catalytic reaction, are fundamental aspects of the mechanism but remain unclear. This is the knowledge gap that this proposal addresses. This proposal will accomplish this goal by using synthetic clusters in which substrates (hydrides and dinitrogen) can bind in either bridging or terminal coordination modes, which mirrors the coordinative flexibility possible for these substrates on the iron-molybdenum cofactor. As part of this inquiry, this proposal will dissect how number, identity, and connectivity of bridging ligands modulate substrate coordination. The results generated in this proposal have broader implications for biochemical reactions, and specifically, shed light on the principles that govern biological catalysis of multi-electron multi-proton redox reactions (e.g., water oxidation in photosynthesis, dioxygen reduction in respiration).

Key facts

NIH application ID
10093066
Project number
5R01GM123241-05
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
Principal Investigator
Leslie Justin Murray
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$276,893
Award type
5
Project period
2017-04-01 → 2023-01-31