Isotopic fractionation in proteins as a measure of hydrogen bond length
Abstract
If a deuterated molecule containing strong intramolecular hydrogen bonds is placed in a hydrogenated solvent it may preferentially exchange deuterium for hydrogen. This preference is due to the difference between the vibrational zero-point energy for hydrogen and deuterium. It is found that the associated fractionation factor is correlated with the strength of the intramolecular hydrogen bonds. This correlation has been used to determine the length of the H-bonds (donor-acceptor separation) in a diverse range of enzymes and has been argued to support the existence of short low-barrier H-bonds. Starting with a potential energy surface based on a simple diabatic state model for H-bonds we calculate as a function of the proton donor-acceptor distance R. For numerical results, we use a parameterization of the model for symmetric O-H.... O bonds. We consider the relative contributions of the O-H stretch vibration, O-H bend vibrations (both in plane and out of plane), tunnelling splitting effects at finite temperature, and the secondary geometric isotope effect. We compare our total as a function of R with NMR experimental results for enzymes, and in particular with an empirical parametrisation (R), used previously to determine bond lengths.
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