Fluctuations in Biological and Bioinspired Electron-Transfer Reactions

Author:

Skourtis Spiros S.1,Waldeck David H.2,Beratan David N.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, University of Cyprus, Nicosia 1678, Cyprus;

2. Department of Chemistry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260;

3. Departments of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708;

Abstract

Central to theories of electron transfer (ET) is the idea that nuclear motion generates a transition state that enables electron flow to proceed, but nuclear motion also induces fluctuations in the donor-acceptor (DA) electronic coupling that is the rate-limiting parameter for nonadiabatic ET. The interplay between the DA energy gap and DA coupling fluctuations is particularly noteworthy in biological ET, where flexible protein and mobile water bridges take center stage. Here, we discuss the critical timescales at play for ET reactions in fluctuating media, highlighting issues of the Condon approximation, average medium versus fluctuation-controlled electron tunneling, gated and solvent relaxation controlled electron transfer, and the influence of inelastic tunneling on electronic coupling pathway interferences. Taken together, one may use this framework to establish principles to describe how macromolecular structure and structural fluctuations influence ET reactions. This framework deepens our understanding of ET chemistry in fluctuating media. Moreover, it provides a unifying perspective for biophysical charge-transfer processes and helps to frame new questions associated with energy harvesting and transduction in fluctuating media.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

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