Abstract
Uncovering the secrets of the biological Faradaic reactions, essential to the understanding of complex metalloenzymes, requires an information recovery process that is robust, rapid and replicable. This paper is a description of the workflow we have developed over the course of inferring chemical reaction parameters for a simple protein system, a bacterial cytochrome domain from \textit{Cellvibrio japonicus}. This was a challenging task, as the signal-to-noise ratio in such protein-film voltammetry experiments is significantly lowered relative to the voltammetric data generated by simple chemicals. We have overcome these challenges by using a multiple-technique approach, which compensates for the difficulties inherent to analysis of the individual voltammetry experiments. We have shown that the parameters inferred are robust across multiple experiments performed for different preperations of the protein. This is an important proof-of-concept result for analysis of more complex metalloenzymes, which incorporate catalytic processes and multiple internal electron-transfer sites.
Supplementary materials
Title
Cytochrome PSV SI(1)
Description
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