Unraveling the Mechanism
of Catalytic Reduction of
O<sub>2</sub> by Microperoxidase-11 Adsorbed within a Transparent
3D-Nanoporous ITO Film
- Publication date
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Abstract
Nanoporous films of indium tin oxide (ITO), with thicknesses
ranging
from 250 nm to 2 μm, were prepared by Glancing Angle Deposition
(GLAD) and used as highly sensitive transparent 3D-electrodes for
quantitatively interrogating, by time-resolved spectroelectrochemistry,
the reactivity of microperoxidase-11 (MP-11) adsorbed within such
films. The capacitive current densities of these 3D-electrodes as
well as the amount of adsorbed MP-11 were shown to be linearly correlated
to the GLAD ITO film thickness, indicating a homogeneous distribution
of MP-11 across the film as well as homogeneous film porosity. Under
saturating adsorption conditions, MP-11 film concentration as high
as 60 mM was reached. This is equivalent to a stack of 110 monolayers
of MP-11 per micrometer film thickness. This high MP-11 film loading
combined with the excellent ITO film conductivity has allowed the
simultaneous characterization of the heterogeneous one-electron transfer
dynamics of the MP-11 Fe<sup>III</sup>/Fe<sup>II</sup> redox couple
by cyclic voltammetry and cyclic voltabsorptometry, up to a scan rate
of few volts per second with a satisfactory single-scan signal-to-noise
ratio. The potency of the method to unravel complex redox coupled
chemical reactions was also demonstrated with the catalytic reduction
of oxygen by MP-11. In the presence of O<sub>2</sub>, cross-correlation
of electrochemical and spectroscopic data has allowed us to determine
the key kinetics and thermodynamics parameters of the redox catalysis
that otherwise could not be easily extracted using conventional protein
film voltammetry. On the basis of numerical simulations of cyclic
voltammograms and voltabsorptograms and within the framework of different
plausible catalytic reaction schemes including appropriate approximations,
it was shown possible to discriminate between different possible catalytic
pathways and to identify the relevant catalytic cycle. In addition,
from the best fits of simulations to the experimental voltammograms
and voltabsorptograms, the partition coefficient of O<sub>2</sub> for
the ITO film as well as the values of two kinetic rate constants could
be extracted. It was finally concluded that the catalytic reduction
of O<sub>2</sub> by MP-11 adsorbed within nanoporous ITO films occurs
via a 2-electron mechanism with the formation of an intermediate Fe<sup>III</sup>–OOH adduct characterized by a decay rate of 11 s<sup>–1</sup>. The spectroelectroanalytical strategy presented
here opens new opportunities for characterizing complex redox-coupled
chemical reactions not only with redox proteins, but also with redox
biomimetic systems and catalysts. It might also be of great interest
for the development and optimization of new spectroelectrochemical
sensors and biosensors, or eventually new photoelectrocatalytic systems
or biofuel cells