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    Electron transfer with myoglobin in free and strongly confined regimes: disclosing diverse mechanistic role of the Fe-coordinated water by temperature- and pressure-assisted voltammetric studies

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    <div><p>The naturally occurring electron-transfer (ET) event for myoglobin (Mb) can be mimicked through its functionalization at diversely modified metal platforms to allow for the electron exchange either in freely diffusing or immobilized regimes. In this work, horse muscle Mb was involved in the electron exchange with Au electrodes modified by dissimilar, thin or thick alkanethiol SAMs, terminated either by unicomponent (–OH) or 1 : 1 mixed (–OH/–COOH) functional (externally exposed) entities, respectively. The systematic, temperature- and pressure-supported cyclic voltammetry studies perfectly confirmed certainty of two kinds of ET patterns for Mb, embodying: (a) different operational kinetic regimes (including protein’s freely diffusing and strongly confined motifs) and (b) different intrinsic physical mechanisms (including dynamically controlled and non-adiabatic modes). Our analysis of obtained and published data for Mb and the reference redox-active protein, cytochrome <i>c</i>, specified further the central mechanistic role of the Fe-(heme-)coordinated water whose displacement is directly coupled to ET, and can be, in turn, controlled by the conformational organization and intrinsic fluctuational mobility of the Mb macromolecule.</p></div
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