Electron transfer in multicentre redox proteins: from fundamentals to extracellular electron transfer

Biosci Rep. 2024 Dec 23:BSR20240576. doi: 10.1042/BSR20240576. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Multicentre redox proteins participate in diverse metabolic processes, such as redox shuttling, multielectron catalysis, or long-distance electron conduction. The detail in which these processes can be analysed depends on the capacity of experimental methods to discriminate the multiple microstates that can be populated while the protein changes from the fully reduced to the fully oxidized state. The population of each state depends on the redox potential of the individual centres and on the magnitude of the interactions between the individual redox centres with their neighbours. It also depends on the interactions with binding sites for other ligands such as protons giving origin to the redox-Bohr effect. Modelling strategies that match the capacity of experimental methods to discriminate the contributions of individual centres are presented. These models provide thermodynamic and kinetic characterization of multicentre redox proteins. The current state of the art in the characterization of multicentre redox proteins is illustrated using the case of multiheme cytochromes involved in the process of extracellular electron transfer. In this new frontier of biological electron transfer, which can extend for distances that exceed the size of the individual multicentre redox proteins by orders of magnitude, current experimental data is still unable, in most cases, to provide discrimination between incoherent conduction by heme orbitals from coherent band conduction.

Keywords: cooperativity; cytochromes; electron transfer.