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Featured researches published by Florian Paulat.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

Electronic structure of heme-nitrosyls and its significance for nitric oxide reactivity, sensing, transport, and toxicity in biological systems.

Lauren E. Goodrich; Florian Paulat; V. K. K. Praneeth; Nicolai Lehnert

This review summarizes recent developments in the investigation of the electronic structures, spectroscopic properties, and reactivities of ferrous and ferric heme-nitrosyls and how this relates to important biological processes. Ferrous heme-nitrosyls show interesting variations in electronic structure as a function of the different types of proximal ligands, as is evident from electron paramagnetic resonance, magnetic circular dichroism, and vibrational spectroscopy. In particular, coordination of imidazoles like histidine (His) increases the radical character on NO and, in this way, could help activate the bound NO for catalysis. Vice versa, the bound NO ligand imposes a strong sigma trans effect on the proximal His, which, in the case of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), the biological NO sensor protein, induces breaking of the Fe(II)-His bond and activates the protein. The possibility of sGC activation by HNO is also discussed. Finally, the properties of ferrous heme-nitrosyls with proximal cysteinate (Cys) coordination are evaluated. It has been known for some time that ferric heme-nitrosyls are intrinsically more labile than their ferrous counterparts, but the underlying reasons for this observation have not been clarified. New results show that this property relates to the presence of a low-lying excited state that is dissociative with respect to the Fe(III)-NO bond. On the other hand, the ground state of these complexes is best described as Fe(II)-NO(+), which shows a very strong Fe-NO bond, as is evident from vibrational spectroscopy. NO, therefore, is a weak ligand to ferric heme, which, at the same time, forms a strong Fe-NO bond. This is possible because the thermodynamic weakness and spectroscopic strength of the Fe-NO bond relate to the properties of different electronic states. Thiolate coordination to ferric hemes leads to a weakening of both the Fe-NO and N-O bonds as a function of the thiolate donor strength. This observation can be explained by a sigma backbond into the sigma* orbital of the Fe-N-O unit that is mediated by the thiolate sigma-donor orbital via orbital mixing. This is a new interaction in heme-nitrosyl that has not been observed before. This also induces a bending of the Fe-N-O subunit in these cases. New spectroscopic data on a corresponding model complex are included in this paper. Finally, the mechanism of NO reduction by cytochrome P450nor is elucidated based on recent density functional theory results.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Electronic Structure of Six-Coordinate Iron(III)−Porphyrin NO Adducts: The Elusive Iron(III)−NO(radical) State and Its Influence on the Properties of These Complexes

V. K. K. Praneeth; Florian Paulat; Timothy C. Berto; Serena DeBeer George; Christian Näther; Corinne D. Sulok; Nicolai Lehnert

This paper investigates the interaction between five-coordinate ferric hemes with bound axial imidazole ligands and nitric oxide (NO). The corresponding model complex, [Fe(TPP)(MI)(NO)](BF4) (MI = 1-methylimidazole), is studied using vibrational spectroscopy coupled to normal coordinate analysis and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. In particular, nuclear resonance vibrational spectroscopy is used to identify the Fe-N(O) stretching vibration. The results reveal the usual Fe(II)-NO(+) ground state for this complex, which is characterized by strong Fe-NO and N-O bonds, with Fe-NO and N-O force constants of 3.92 and 15.18 mdyn/A, respectively. This is related to two strong pi back-bonds between Fe(II) and NO(+). The alternative ground state, low-spin Fe(III)-NO(radical) (S = 0), is then investigated. DFT calculations show that this state exists as a stable minimum at a surprisingly low energy of only approximately 1-3 kcal/mol above the Fe(II)-NO(+) ground state. In addition, the Fe(II)-NO(+) potential energy surface (PES) crosses the low-spin Fe(III)-NO(radical) energy surface at a very small elongation (only 0.05-0.1 A) of the Fe-NO bond from the equilibrium distance. This implies that ferric heme nitrosyls with the latter ground state might exist, particularly with axial thiolate (cysteinate) coordination as observed in P450-type enzymes. Importantly, the low-spin Fe(III)-NO(radical) state has very different properties than the Fe(II)-NO(+) state. Specifically, the Fe-NO and N-O bonds are distinctively weaker, showing Fe-NO and N-O force constants of only 2.26 and 13.72 mdyn/A, respectively. The PES calculations further reveal that the thermodynamic weakness of the Fe-NO bond in ferric heme nitrosyls is an intrinsic feature that relates to the properties of the high-spin Fe(III)-NO(radical) (S = 2) state that appears at low energy and is dissociative with respect to the Fe-NO bond. Altogether, release of NO from a six-coordinate ferric heme nitrosyl requires the system to pass through at least three different electronic states, a process that is remarkably complex and also unprecedented for transition-metal nitrosyls. These findings have implications not only for heme nitrosyls but also for group-8 transition-metal(III) nitrosyls in general.


Journal of Computational Chemistry | 2006

Electronic structure of iron(II)-porphyrin nitroxyl complexes : Molecular mechanism of fungal nitric oxide reductase (P450nor)

Nicolai Lehnert; V. K. K. Praneeth; Florian Paulat

Density functional calculations are employed to investigate key intermediates of the catalytic cycle of fungal nitric oxide reductase (P450nor). The formal Fe(II)–nitroxyl species Fe(II)NO/(−) can principally exist in the two spin‐states S = 0 and S = 1. In the S = 0 case, a very covalent FeNO σ bond is present, which leads to an electronic structure description that is actually intermediate between Fe(I)NO and Fe(II)NO−. In contrast, the S = 1 case shows a ferrous Fe(II)NO complex with the extra electron being stored in the π system of the porphyrin ligand. Importantly, the Fe(II)NO/(−) species are very basic. The electronic structures and spectroscopic properties of the corresponding N‐ and O‐protonated forms are very different, and unequivocally show that the Mb–HNO adduct (Mb‐Myoglobin) prepared by farmer and coworkers is in fact N‐protonated. The presence of an axial thiolate ligand enables a second protonation leading to the corresponding Fe(IV)NHOH− species, which is identified with the catalytically active intermediate I of P450nor. This species reacts with a second molecule of NO by initial electron transfer from NO to Fe(IV) followed by addition of NO+ forming an NN bond. This is accompanied by an energetically very favorable intramolecular proton transfer leading to the generation of a quite stable Fe(III)N(OH)(NOH) complex. This way, the enzyme is able to produce dimerized HNO under very controlled conditions and to prevent loss of this ligand from Fe(III). The energetically disfavoured tautomer Fe(III)N(OH2)(NO) is the catalytically productive species that spontaneously cleaves the NOH2 bond forming N2O and H2O in a highly exergonic reaction.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Detailed Assignment of the Magnetic Circular Dichroism and UV-vis Spectra of Five-Coordinate High-Spin Ferric (Fe(TPP)(Cl))

Florian Paulat; Nicolai Lehnert

High-spin (hs) ferric heme centers occur in the catalytic or redox cycles of many metalloproteins and exhibit very complicated magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) and UV-vis absorption spectra. Therefore, detailed assignments of the MCD spectra of these species are missing. In this study, the electronic spectra (MCD and UV-vis) of the five-coordinate hs ferric model complex [Fe(TPP)(Cl)] are analyzed and assigned for the first time. A correlated fit of the absorption and low-temperature MCD spectra of [Fe(TPP)(Cl)] lead to the identification of at least 20 different electronic transitions. The assignments of these spectra are based on the following: (a) variable temperature and variable field saturation data, (b) time-dependent density functional theory calculations, (c) MCD pseudo A-terms, and (d) correlation to resonance Raman (rRaman) data to validate the assignments. From these results, a number of puzzling questions about the electronic spectra of [Fe(TPP)(Cl)] are answered. The Soret band in [Fe(TPP)(Cl)] is split into three components because one of its components is mixed with the porphyrin A2u72-->Eg82/83 (pi-->pi*) transition. The broad, intense absorption feature at higher energy from the Soret band is due to one of the Soret components and a mixed sigma and pi chloro to iron CT transition. The high-temperature MCD data allow for the identification of the Q v band at 20 202 cm(-1), which corresponds to the C-term feature at 20 150 cm(-1). Q is not observed but can be localized by correlation to rRaman data published before. Finally, the low energy absorption band around 650 nm is assigned to two P-->Fe charge transfer transitions, one being the long sought after A1u(HOMO)-->d pi transition.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

Nuclear resonance vibrational spectroscopy applied to [Fe(OEP)(NO)]: the vibrational assignments of five-coordinate ferrous heme-nitrosyls and implications for electronic structure.

Nicolai Lehnert; Mary Grace I. Galinato; Florian Paulat; George B. Richter-Addo; Wolfgang Sturhahn; Nan Xu; Jiyong Zhao

This study presents Nuclear Resonance Vibrational Spectroscopy (NRVS) data on the five-coordinate (5C) ferrous heme-nitrosyl complex [Fe(OEP)(NO)] (1, OEP(2-) = octaethylporphyrinato dianion) and the corresponding (15)N(18)O labeled complex. The obtained spectra identify two isotope sensitive features at 522 and 388 cm(-1), which shift to 508 and 381 cm(-1), respectively, upon isotope labeling. These features are assigned to the Fe-NO stretch nu(Fe-NO) and the in-plane Fe-N-O bending mode delta(ip)(Fe-N-O), the latter has been unambiguously assigned for the first time for 1. The obtained NRVS data were simulated using our quantum chemistry centered normal coordinate analysis (QCC-NCA). Since complex 1 can potentially exist in 12 different conformations involving the FeNO and peripheral ethyl orientations, extended density functional theory (DFT) calculations and QCC-NCA simulations were performed to determine how these conformations affect the NRVS properties of [Fe(OEP)NO]. These results show that the properties and force constants of the FeNO unit are hardly affected by the conformational changes involving the ethyl substituents. On the other hand, the NRVS-active porphyrin-based vibrations around 340-360, 300-320, and 250-270 cm(-1) are sensitive to the conformational changes. The spectroscopic changes observed in these regions are due to selective mechanical couplings of one component of E(u)-type (in ideal D(4h) symmetry) porphyrin-based vibrations with the in-plane Fe-N-O bending mode. This leads to the observed variations in Fe(OEP) core mode energies and NRVS intensities without affecting the properties of the FeNO unit. The QCC-NCA simulated NRVS spectra of 1 show excellent agreement with experiment, and indicate that conformer F is likely present in the samples of this complex investigated here. The observed porphyrin-based vibrations in the NRVS spectra of 1 are also assigned based on the QCC-NCA results. The obtained force constants of the Fe-NO and N-O bonds are 2.83-2.94 (based on the DFT functional applied) and about 12.15 mdyn/A, respectively. The electronic structures of 5C ferrous heme-nitrosyls in different model complexes are then analyzed, and variations in their properties based on different porphyrin substituents are explained. Finally, the shortcomings of different DFT functionals in describing the axial FeNO subunit in heme-nitrosyls are elucidated.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Vibrational Assignments of Six-Coordinate Ferrous Heme Nitrosyls: New Insight From Nuclear Resonance Vibrational Spectroscopy

Florian Paulat; Timothy C. Berto; Serena DeBeer George; Lauren E. Goodrich; V. K. K. Praneeth; Corinne D. Sulok; Nicolai Lehnert

This Communication addresses a long-standing problem: the exact vibrational assignments of the low-energy modes of the Fe-N-O subunit in six-coordinate ferrous heme nitrosyl model complexes. This problem is addressed using nuclear resonance vibrational spectroscopy (NRVS) coupled to (15)N(18)O isotope labeling and detailed simulations of the obtained data. Two isotope-sensitive features are identified at 437 and 563 cm(-1). Normal coordinate analysis shows that the 437 cm(-1) mode corresponds to the Fe-NO stretch, whereas the 563 cm(-1) band is identified with the Fe-N-O bend. The relative NRVS intensities of these features determine the degree of vibrational mixing between the stretch and the bend. The implications of these results are discussed with respect to the trans effect of imidazole on the bound NO. In addition, a comparison to myoglobin-NO (Mb-NO) is made to determine the effect of the Mb active site pocket on the bound NO.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Structural and Spectroscopic Characterization of Mononuclear Copper(I) Nitrosyl Complexes: End-on versus Side-on Coordination of NO to Copper(I)

Kiyoshi Fujisawa; Akira Tateda; Yoshitaro Miyashita; Ken-ichi Okamoto; Florian Paulat; V. K. K. Praneeth; and Anna Merkle; Nicolai Lehnert


Inorganic Chemistry | 2006

Quantum Chemistry-Based Analysis of the Vibrational Spectra of Five-Coordinate Metalloporphyrins [M(TPP)Cl]

Florian Paulat; V. K. K. Praneeth; Christian Näther; Nicolai Lehnert


Inorganic Chemistry | 2007

Electronic Structure of Ferric Heme Nitrosyl Complexes with Thiolate Coordination

Florian Paulat; Nicolai Lehnert


Inorganic Chemistry | 2004

Spectroscopic properties and electronic structure of pentammineruthenium(II) dinitrogen oxide and corresponding nitrosyl complexes: Binding mode of N2O and reactivity

Florian Paulat; Torben Kuschel; Christian Näther; V. K. K. Praneeth; Ole Sander; Nicolai Lehnert

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