Ultrafast Charge-Transfer Dynamics in the Iron-Sulfur Complex of Rhodobacter capsulatus Ferredoxin VI

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

Ziliang Mao (University of California)

Elizabeth C. Carroll (TU Delft - ImPhys/Charged Particle Optics)

Peter W. Kim (Sandia National Laboratories, California)

Stephen P. Cramer (University of California)

Delmar S. Larsen (University of California)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.7b02026 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Issue number
18
Volume number
8
Pages (from-to)
4498-4503
Downloads counter
180

Abstract

Iron-sulfur proteins play essential roles in various biological processes. Their electronic structure and vibrational dynamics are key to their rich chemistry but nontrivial to unravel. Here, the first ultrafast transient absorption and impulsive coherent vibrational spectroscopic (ICVS) studies on 2Fe-2S clusters in Rhodobacter capsulatus ferreodoxin VI are characterized. Photoexcitation initiated populations on multiple excited electronic states that evolve into each other in a long-lived charge-transfer state. This suggests a potential light-induced electron-transfer pathway as well as the possibility of using iron-sulfur proteins as photosensitizers for light-dependent enzymes. A tyrosine chain near the active site suggests potential hole-transfer pathways and affirms this electron-transfer pathway. The ICVS data revealed vibrational bands at 417 and 484 cm-1, with the latter attributed to an excited-state mode. The temperature dependence of the ICVS modes suggests that the temperature effect on protein structure or conformational heterogeneities needs to be considered during cryogenic temperature studies.