Direct detection of a single [4Fe‐4S] cluster in a tungsten‐containing enzyme: Electrochemical conversion of CO2 into formate by formate dehydrogenase

Author:

Li Wenjin1,Gao Yanxin1,Sun Xuan2,Wan Lei3ORCID,Ji Haishuo1,Luo Hang1,Tian Yao4,Song Hao4,Wu Geng2,Zhang Liyun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Medicinal Chemical Biology, College of Life Science Nankai University Tianjin People's Republic of China

2. State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, The Joint International Research Laboratory of Metabolic & Developmental Sciences, School of Life Science and Biotechnology Shanghai Jiao Tong University Shanghai People's Republic of China

3. Max Planck Institute for Chemical Energy Conversion Mülheim an der Ruhr Germany

4. Frontier Science Center for Synthetic Biology, Key Laboratory of Systems Bioengineering, School of Chemical Engineering and Technology Tianjin University Tianjin People's Republic of China

Abstract

AbstractThe conversion of CO2 into fuels and valuable chemicals is one of the central topics to combat climate change and meet the growing demand for renewable energy. Herein, we show that the formate dehydrogenase from Clostridium ljungdahlii (ClFDH) adsorbed on electrodes displays clear characteristic voltammetric signals that can be assigned to the reduction and oxidation potential of the [4Fe‐4S]2+/+ cluster under nonturnover conditions. Upon adding substrates, the signals transform into a specific redox center that engages in catalytic electron transport. ClFDH catalyzes rapid and efficient reversible interconversion between CO2 and formate in the presence of substrates. The turnover frequency of electrochemical CO2 reduction is determined as 1210 s−1 at 25 °C and pH 7.0, which can be further enhanced up to 1786 s−1 at 50°C. The Faradaic efficiency at −0.6 V (vs. standard hydrogen electrode) is recorded as 99.3% in a 2‐h reaction. Inhibition experiments and theoretical modeling disclose interesting pathways for CO2 entry, formate exit, and OCN competition, suggesting an oxidation‐state‐dependent binding mechanism of catalysis. Our results provide a different perspective for understanding the catalytic mechanism of FDH and original insights into the design of synthetic catalysts.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Energy (miscellaneous),Materials Science (miscellaneous),Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

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