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1 which is positioned to serve as the initial proton donor.
2 can reduce N(2) in the presence of PhOH as a proton donor.
3 m stabilization by solvent water acting as a proton donor.
4 postulated to adopt the role of active site proton donor.
5 that requires significant desolvation of the proton donor.
6 sm where H2O, in addition to H+, serves as a proton donor.
7 gy to an extent dependent on the strength of proton donor.
8 consistent with water being the active site proton donor.
9 -298 is correctly located to function as the proton donor.
10 or a conserved acidic residue that acts as a proton donor.
11 donor employed, and the concentration of the proton donor.
12 quantum calculations show it to be a potent proton donor.
13 ses it was beneficial to add an alcohol as a proton donor.
14 at D210 likely operates as the leaving group proton donor.
15 a proton acceptor and, subsequently, Asp96 a proton donor.
16 bstrate and that R67 DHFR does not possess a proton donor.
17 shed and this residue thereby becomes a good proton donor.
18 e Hunig base as the sacrificial electron and proton donor.
19 itic growth was observed in the absence of a proton donor.
20 r NO or NH(4)(+) in the presence of a modest proton donor.
21 active-site histidine serving as the second proton donor.
22 dard potential as dictated by the pKa of the proton donor.
23 ng into account the presence of an exogenous proton donor.
24 activation by acting as both an electron and proton donor.
25 d proton transfer, and the role of Tyr196 as proton donor.
26 posed to serve as a transiently deprotonated proton donor.
27 ing group, with a neutral Asp132 as a likely proton donor.
28 erring H(+) is initially associated with the proton donor.
29 Co(III)-hydride is formed by reaction with a proton donor.
30 ta2-N2) was also accomplished by addition of proton donors.
31 that were previously identified as possible proton donors.
32 cene and weak O-H bonds upon activation with proton donors.
33 potential and in the absence of electrolyte proton donors.
34 mer Bronsted bases blended with organic acid proton donors.
35 H-bonding stabilizers and high-concentration proton donors.
37 he catalytic pathway from the pai-associated proton donor, a system was assessed that produced measur
38 vibronic coupling and its dependence on the proton donor-acceptor distance can significantly impact
39 ic coupling decreases exponentially with the proton donor-acceptor distance for the range of distance
41 r as the proton acceptor in part because the proton donor-acceptor distance is approximately 0.2 A sm
44 ster than the first reaction since a smaller proton donor-acceptor distance leads to a larger overlap
45 del is not a good predictor of the effect of proton donor-acceptor distance on concerted-electron tra
46 strong dependence of proton transfer on the proton donor-acceptor distance provides an explanation f
47 alf arise from the change in the equilibrium proton donor-acceptor distance upon electron transfer.
48 compression; however, the relevant C...O(-) proton donor-acceptor distance was longer, due to a twis
49 isotope effect is strongly influenced by the proton donor-acceptor distance with the dominant contrib
50 ent-coupled dynamic networks to optimize the proton donor-acceptor distance, but evolutionary pressur
51 e carboxylate also decreases the equilibrium proton donor-acceptor distance, thereby facilitating the
54 e in a manner that decreases the equilibrium proton donor-acceptor distances or alters the molecular
60 f the KIE is determined predominantly by the proton donor-acceptor frequency and the distance depende
61 e overall rate is strongly influenced by the proton donor-acceptor frequency, the vibronic coupling,
62 relation functions of the energy gap and the proton donor-acceptor mode, which can be calculated from
63 ited electron-proton vibronic states and the proton donor-acceptor motion provided an apparent reorga
64 bond, which corresponds to a high-frequency proton donor-acceptor motion, and small inner-sphere and
69 eplacements, these substitutions perturb the proton donor-acceptor relative orientation change and th
70 cal and quantum mechanical treatments of the proton donor-acceptor vibrational motion are presented.
72 sists of an aspartate residue serving as key proton donor/acceptor (Asp-684) and an arginine residue
73 ding to mutagenesis experiments, the role of proton donor/acceptor along the D-pathway is carried by
76 y, site accessibility, and the presence of a proton donor/acceptor group near the reaction site, are
80 These results directly establish E17 as a proton donor/acceptor in the Nia-S <--> Nia-C equilibriu
81 is simple mononuclear system illustrates how proton donor/acceptor ligands can vastly increase the ra
82 ding sites that include the proposed initial proton donor/acceptor of the K pathway, Glu-101 of subun
87 rovide their carboxylic groups as substitute proton donors/acceptors in the absence of Glu-101II, as
88 la (H64A HCA II) can be rescued by exogenous proton donors/acceptors, usually derivatives of imidazol
90 mplements neither substrate modification nor proton donor agents in the aqueous solution, known to fa
92 the desirable Pd(II)-precatalyst, (b) a soft proton donor and a bidentately coordinated dianionic lig
93 gen-bonding interactions and by bringing the proton donor and acceptor closer to each other with the
94 arge around the frontier atoms than when the proton donor and acceptor groups are alternating as in D
95 ed a role for phosphoric acid and acetate as proton donor and acceptor in the concerted electron-prot
98 intrinsically slow proton exchange between a proton donor and acceptor pair that are not in close con
99 h a hydrogen-bond relay inserted between the proton donor and acceptor sites was studied electrochemi
101 hich apparently hinder the close approach of proton donor and acceptor that facilitates MS-CPET.
102 evealed that resveratrol functions as both a proton donor and acceptor, contributing to its strong ta
104 ns in the catalytic cycle, namely first as a proton donor and later as the substrate in the reaction
105 idic side chains that could serve as general proton donor and nucleophile/base in a canonical hydroly
106 attraction between the dipole moments of the proton donor and proton acceptor must be balanced by the
107 The asymmetry in angular rigidity of the proton donor and proton acceptor of hydrogen-bonded hydr
108 nzoate or p-aminobenzoate, reveal a chain of proton donors and acceptors (the hydroxyl groups of Tyr2
109 h comprise active hydrogen atoms that act as proton donors and acceptors, simultaneously hindering em
112 t with the shifts observed in other H-bonded proton donors and provides corroborating spectral eviden
114 the NH amide proton of the upper side chain (proton donor) and glycine acetamide of the lower side ch
116 d Glu359 may function as the catalytic acid (proton donor) and nucleophile (base), respectively, duri
117 hange in distance between the phenol oxygen (proton donor) and quinoline nitrogen (proton acceptor),
118 u(I) :1S redox state, use of a second-sphere proton donor, and reactivity dependence on both primary
121 n acceptor rather than being the anticipated proton donor, as would be expected if Asp beta99 were io
122 plex, the protonation states of the electron/proton donor (ascorbate) and all of the residues involve
123 dopsin photocycle is greatly slowed when the proton donor Asp-96 is removed with site-specific mutage
125 tending from the Schiff base to the internal proton donor Asp96, stabilizes L and affects the L-to-M
127 ton transfer into the RC, acting as RC-bound proton donors at the entrance of the proton-transfer pat
130 center or the absence of a lone pair on the proton donor, because F(3)Si-H.OH(2), F(2)NH.FH, F(2)PH.
134 -O bond in 2 in the presence of electron and proton donors by a proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCE
136 anced monomer stability, lowering the pKa of proton donor catalytic residue, optimized spatial distri
138 d ribonuclease cleavage mechanisms where the proton donor coordinates with the oxygen of the leaving
141 is of a judicious choice of a Sm(II) complex/proton donor couple, even in the presence of extremely s
143 circumvents a requirement for expulsion by a proton donor during attack by cysteine on the gamma phos
145 y been proposed to play a critical role as a proton donor during the second half-reaction of MurB, na
148 These results suggest that there are two proton donors during the activation of UV pigments, the
151 acid-base chemistry, we mutated the putative proton donor E17 to Q in the soluble hydrogenase I from
152 idues (H21G, E24D/G, and H116G), the general proton donor (E178A), and mutants designed to switch the
154 figuration of the diastereomer reacting, the proton donor employed, and the concentration of the prot
157 d a glutamate at position 132 that acts as a proton donor for chromophore reprotonation during the ph
158 ning alcohol products by serving as a strong proton donor for electrochemical dehydration reductions.
161 ment Tyr 34 --> Phe suggest that Tyr 34 is a proton donor for O2* - reduction to H2O2 or is involved
162 e/bicarbonate exchanger), where it acts as a proton donor for the anion/proton cotransport function.
165 ore, we conclude that Glu46 functions as the proton donor for the protonation of pCA during the PYP p
167 otonated in pG and protonated in pB, but the proton donor for this process has not yet been identifie
168 r catalysis and may function indirectly as a proton donor for turnover, coupled to a protonation cycl
170 ed to twist into a conformation blocking the proton donor from its side, thus reversing the stereoche
172 omplished by separating the initial phenolic proton donor from the pyridine-based terminal proton acc
173 ed by general acid/base (proton acceptor and proton donor) functionality, with nucleophilic addition
179 s that hydrogen bonds from hydroxyl or other proton-donor groups to carbonyl oxygens potentially can
181 chain of hydrogen-bonded waters linking the proton donor His64 and acceptor zinc-bound hydroxide.
182 s64, yet the difference in p K a between the proton donor His64 and zinc-bound hydroxide was near zer
183 ifferences in the values of the pK(a) of the proton donor (His64) and acceptor (zinc-bound hydroxide)
184 esence of iron(II) shows a requirement for a proton donor, implying a role for an acidic group in the
186 g evidence that Y171 does not operate as the proton donor in catalysis and that the additional role o
187 mutants indicate that Tyr425' is the primary proton donor in catalysis, with Tyr367' functioning as a
190 critical role of the solvent environment and proton donor in dictating the mechanistic landscape of C
193 ition of exogenous imidazole which acts as a proton donor in place of the imidazole groups of His tha
194 ate that transiently protonated Lys47 is the proton donor in tetrahedral intermediate collapse to the
195 ce 2-enoyl-CoA, whereas Glu164 serves as the proton donor in the absence of Tyr166 to yield 3-enoyl-C
198 acceptor in the hydration direction and the proton donor in the dehydration direction for the rate-l
200 r studies suggested histidine as a potential proton donor in the hydrolysis of sucrose, but by mutage
201 rfaces and highlight the crucial role of the proton donor in the kinetics of electrocatalytic energy
203 te that Y158 does not function formally as a proton donor in the reaction but likely functions as an
205 catalytic residue, probably functioning as a proton donor in the reductive acylation of lipoamide on
207 r166 with the assistance of His252 acting as proton donor in the wild-type enzyme to produce 2-enoyl-
213 equivalent efficiency of Glu64 and Asp64 as proton donors in the catalysis by CA III demonstrate a l
215 are best to be avoided; (ii) the addition of proton donors in the form of protonated weak bases can b
216 ed by 4-methylimidazole (4-MI), an exogenous proton donor, in a saturable process with a maximum acti
219 termolecular bending frequency of HF, as the proton donor, is linearly proportional to the square roo
221 and in the case of a ligand, which is also a proton donor, it may also enhance the reaction by proton
222 midazole groups of the His-H126 and His-H128 proton donors, located at the entrance of the transfer p
226 If Lys166 indeed serves as the terminal proton donor, mutants lacking an ionizable side chain at
227 ow show that when alpha-195(His), a putative proton donor near the active site, is substituted by glu
229 as postulated that residue Cys-82 may be the proton donor of the decarboxylation reaction catalyzed b
231 on of CO(2) hydration at steady state and as proton donors of the exchange of (18)O between CO(2) and
232 of nonproductive binding sites for exogenous proton donors offers an explanation for the unusually lo
234 e of commonly added, supposedly sacrificial, proton donors on SEI chemistry and morphology remains a
235 gesting the importance of lysine as either a proton donor or a stabilizing cation during strand cleav
239 on of a vibrational Stark-shift probe with a proton donor provides critical insight into the interpla
240 of the excited state molecule occurs when a proton donor reacts with the carboxylate during the exci
242 d MR, suggesting that His-186 is not the key proton donor required for the reduction of 2-cyclohexen-
243 be inactive due to the loss of its putative proton donor residue, exhibited 27% of the wild-type act
245 rmed the catalytic function of the predicted proton donor residues, and sequence analysis suggested t
246 t Asp-97 and Glu-108 are proton acceptor and proton donor, respectively, in retinylidene Schiff base
247 ch boosted the paralleled catalytic surge of proton donors, resulting in an attomolar detection limit
251 ue such as HisH(+) makes for a very powerful proton donor, such that even its CH..O H-bonds are stron
252 Acid-base reactions involving cyanide and proton donors, such as amino acids and other cell cultur
253 on structures and peptide domains, including proton donors, suggest that MGA and SI evolved by duplic
257 al, and kinetic studies show that only those proton donors that coordinate or chelate strongly to Sm(
259 In response to chemical substitutions of the proton donor, the energy of the transition state for dir
260 he proton acceptor Asp85 is connected to the proton donor, the retinal Schiff base, through a hydroge
262 chanistic investigations suggest a switch of proton donor to account for the stereoinvertive formatio
263 his pKa is likely to be that of the internal proton donor to Asp-194, the Glu-204 site, before photoe
264 er molecule in a water channel is the direct proton donor to enolpyruvate and that Thr-298 affects a
266 the pKa of aspartic acid D396, the putative proton donor to FAD.(-), from ~7.4 to >9, and favours a
267 led that, in addition to its function as the proton donor to fructose-6-phosphate during formation of
271 oton transfer from the His215 catalytic site proton donor to the deoxyadenosine 5'-oxygen in the tran
272 d that serine 229 was positioned to act as a proton donor to the developing C2 carbanion during the r
273 is that involves rate-limiting CPET from the proton donor to the electrode surface, allowing this cat
278 with the presence of a hydrogen bond from a proton donor to the phenolic oxygen atom of a neutral ty
279 as OH..phi bonds formed by the approach of a proton donor to the pi electron cloud above the aromatic
280 l carboxyl group is in place of the internal proton donor to the retinal Schiff base in the light-dri
282 on donors for reducing the catalyst and (ii) proton donors to activate the substrate via a proton-cou
285 of glutamic acid 64 and aspartic acid 64 as proton donors to the zinc-bound hydroxide in a series of
287 en-bonding interactions with the acetic acid proton donor upon reduction from Fe(III)/(II), favoring
288 that the activation of H64W HCA II by these proton donors was reflected in the work functions w(r) a
289 In the presence of HMPA, the rate order of proton donors was zero and product studies showed that t
291 henolate hydrogen bond and that Tyr16 is the proton donor when a bound naphtholate inhibitor is obser
292 lar protonation could be achieved by using a proton donor which complexes to SmI2, in which case the
293 e of the active site cavity, is the proposed proton donor which facilitates purine base departure.
295 es from an unfavorable preassociation of the proton donor with the superoxide adduct and a transition
296 dazole and pyridine derivatives as exogenous proton donors with the indole ring of Trp-64; these expe
297 ding the conserved catalytic nucleophile and proton donor, with endoglucanases from glucosyl hydrolas
298 otentials, solvent water becomes the primary proton donor, with multiple competing mechanisms observe
299 Radical anions are well known to react with proton donors, yet their reactivity with hydrides remain
300 p by NADH, assisted by Tyr(147) as catalytic proton donor, yields UDP-xylose adopting the relaxed (4)