Photocatalytic Hydrogen Evolution by a De Novo Designed Metalloprotein that Undergoes Ni-Mediated Oligomerization Shift

Chemistry. 2023 Mar 7;29(14):e202202902. doi: 10.1002/chem.202202902. Epub 2023 Feb 6.

Abstract

De novo metalloprotein design involves the construction of proteins guided by specific repeat patterns of polar and apolar residues, which, upon self-assembly, provide a suitable environment to bind metals and produce artificial metalloenzymes. While a wide range of functionalities have been realized in de novo designed metalloproteins, the functional repertoire of such constructs towards alternative energy-relevant catalysis is currently limited. Here we show the application of de novo approach to design a functional H2 evolving protein. The design involved the assembly of an amphiphilic peptide featuring cysteines at tandem a/d sites of each helix. Intriguingly, upon NiII addition, the oligomers shift from a major trimeric assembly to a mix of dimers and trimers. The metalloprotein produced H2 photocatalytically with a bell-shape pH dependence, having a maximum activity at pH 5.5. Transient absorption spectroscopy is used to determine the timescales of electron transfer as a function of pH. Selective outer sphere mutations are made to probe how the local environment tunes activity. A preferential enhancement of activity is observed via steric modulation above the NiII site, towards the N-termini, compared to below the NiII site towards the C-termini.

Keywords: de novo proteins; photocatalysis; self-assembly; solar H2; transient absorption kinetics.

MeSH terms

  • Cysteine / chemistry
  • Hydrogen
  • Metalloproteins* / chemistry
  • Metals
  • Peptides / chemistry

Substances

  • Metalloproteins
  • Hydrogen
  • Metals
  • Cysteine
  • Peptides