Force-activated reactivity switch in a bimolecular chemical reaction
- PMID: 21378854
- DOI: 10.1038/nchem.207
Force-activated reactivity switch in a bimolecular chemical reaction
Abstract
The effect of mechanical force on the free-energy surface that governs a chemical reaction is largely unknown. The combination of protein engineering with single-molecule force-clamp spectroscopy allows us to study the influence of mechanical force on the rate at which a protein disulfide bond is reduced by nucleophiles in a bimolecular substitution reaction (S(N)2). We found that cleavage of a protein disulfide bond by hydroxide anions exhibits an abrupt reactivity 'switch' at ∼500 pN, after which the accelerating effect of force on the rate of an S(N)2 chemical reaction greatly diminishes. We propose that an abrupt force-induced conformational change of the protein disulfide bond shifts its ground state, drastically changing its reactivity in S(N)2 chemical reactions. Our experiments directly demonstrate the action of a force-activated switch in the chemical reactivity of a single molecule.
Comment in
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Single-molecule mechanics: Breaking bonds at a stretch.Nat Chem. 2009 Jun;1(3):180-1. doi: 10.1038/nchem.225. Epub 2009 May 10. Nat Chem. 2009. PMID: 21378841 No abstract available.
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