Estimation of Electron Transfer Distances from AM1 Calculations

2000 ◽  
Vol 104 (44) ◽  
pp. 10023-10031 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen F. Nelsen ◽  
Marshall D. Newton
2001 ◽  
Vol 66 (20) ◽  
pp. 6551-6559 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen F. Nelsen ◽  
Fredrik Blomgren

2003 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 575-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
HJ Peter de Lijser ◽  
Jason S Kim ◽  
Suzanne M McGrorty ◽  
Erin M Ulloa

A variety of ortho-, meta-, and para-substituted (-H, -F, -Cl, -CF3, -CN (meta and para only), -CH3, -OCH3, and -NO2) acetophenone oximes were synthesized and studied using laser flash photolysis (LFP) and steady-state photolysis experiments in acetonitrile with chloranil as the photosensitizer. In addition, semi-empirical (AM1) calculations were performed on the neutral species, the radical cations, and the corresponding iminoxyl radicals. The data was analyzed in terms of the electrochemical peak potentials of the oximes, the quenching rates of triplet chloranil (LFP), the calculated ionization potentials, and the measured conversions of the oximes in the steady-state photolysis experiments. Photolysis of the oximes in the presence of chloranil results in the formation of the chloranil radical anion, which reacts rapidly with the oxime radical cation to form the semiquinone radical and an iminoxyl radical. Evidence for the formation of the chloranil radical anion and the semiquinone radical was obtained from LFP studies. The measured quenching rates from the LFP studies represent the rates of electron transfer from the oximes to triplet chloranil. This data was correlated to various radical and polar substituent constants. The Hammett studies suggest that steric, polar, and radical effects are important for ortho-substituted acetophenone oximes, polar effects are important for para-substituted oximes, and radical stabilization is more important than polar effects for the meta-substituted substrates. The calculated ionization potentials of the oximes show an excellent correlation with the measured quenching rates supporting the electron transfer pathway. On the basis of calculated charge densities, we conclude that the measured substituent effects are transition state effects rather than ground state effects. At this point all of the available data suggests that the conversion of the oximes is controlled by two energetically opposing reactions, namely oxidation of the neutral oxime, which is favorable for oximes with electron-donating substituents, and deprotonation of the oxime radical cation, which is favorable for oximes with electron-withdrawing substituents. The overall result is a reaction with little selectivity as far as substituent effects are concerned.Key words: oxime, radical cation, iminoxyl radical, electron transfer, substituent effect.


Author(s):  
P. Bonhomme ◽  
A. Beorchia

We have already described (1.2.3) a device using a pockel's effect light valve as a microscopical electron image converter. This converter can be read out with incoherent or coherent light. In the last case we can set in line with the converter an optical diffractometer. Now, electron microscopy developments have pointed out different advantages of diffractometry. Indeed diffractogram of an image of a thin amorphous part of a specimen gives information about electron transfer function and a single look at a diffractogram informs on focus, drift, residual astigmatism, and after standardizing, on periods resolved (4.5.6). These informations are obvious from diffractogram but are usualy obtained from a micrograph, so that a correction of electron microscope parameters cannot be realized before recording the micrograph. Diffractometer allows also processing of images by setting spatial filters in diffractogram plane (7) or by reconstruction of Fraunhofer image (8). Using Electrotitus read out with coherent light and fitted to a diffractometer; all these possibilities may be realized in pseudoreal time, so that working parameters may be optimally adjusted before recording a micrograph or before processing an image.


2004 ◽  
Vol 71 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
David Leys ◽  
Jaswir Basran ◽  
François Talfournier ◽  
Kamaldeep K. Chohan ◽  
Andrew W. Munro ◽  
...  

TMADH (trimethylamine dehydrogenase) is a complex iron-sulphur flavoprotein that forms a soluble electron-transfer complex with ETF (electron-transferring flavoprotein). The mechanism of electron transfer between TMADH and ETF has been studied using stopped-flow kinetic and mutagenesis methods, and more recently by X-ray crystallography. Potentiometric methods have also been used to identify key residues involved in the stabilization of the flavin radical semiquinone species in ETF. These studies have demonstrated a key role for 'conformational sampling' in the electron-transfer complex, facilitated by two-site contact of ETF with TMADH. Exploration of three-dimensional space in the complex allows the FAD of ETF to find conformations compatible with enhanced electronic coupling with the 4Fe-4S centre of TMADH. This mechanism of electron transfer provides for a more robust and accessible design principle for interprotein electron transfer compared with simpler models that invoke the collision of redox partners followed by electron transfer. The structure of the TMADH-ETF complex confirms the role of key residues in electron transfer and molecular assembly, originally suggested from detailed kinetic studies in wild-type and mutant complexes, and from molecular modelling.


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