U. Ryde, THE COORDINATION CHEMISTRY OF THE CATALYTIC ZINC ION IN ALCOHOL-DEHYDROGENASE STUDIES BY AB-INITIO QUANTUM-CHEMICAL CALCULATIONS, International journal of quantum chemistry, 52(5), 1994, pp. 1229-1243
The coordination chemistry of the zinc ion in the active site of alcoh
ol dehydrogenase has been studied by the ab initio Hartree-Fock method
. Geometry optimizations were performed using analytical gradients and
basis sets of double-zeta quality. Correlation effects were included
at the MP2 level. The active site was modeled by Zn(HS)2XL(H2O)0-2, wh
ere X denotes ammonia or imidazole and L denotes water, methanol, etha
nol, or the corresponding aldehydes or anions. It is shown that with u
ncharged L-ligands the four-coordinate complexes are about 20, 17, and
40kJ/mol more stable than are the corresponding three-, five-, and si
x-coordinate complexes, respectively. If the L-ligand is negatively ch
arged, only the four-coordinate complexes are stable. These results su
ggest that the active-site zinc ion in alcohol dehydrogenase prefers a
coordination number of four during the catalytic reaction, especially
when the nonprotein ligand is negatively charged. Ligand exchange at
the zinc ion is likely to proceed by an associative mechanism with int
ermittent formation of a five-coordinate complex. The results lend no
support to mechanistic proposals attributing an important catalytic ro
le to a negatively charged five-coordinate hydroxide or alkoxide ligan
d. (C) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.