首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
A combined one-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect, paramagnetic-induced relaxation and two-dimensional sequence-specific 1H n.m.r. assignment of the spectrum of portions of the distal pocket of Aplysia cyano metMyoglobin (metMbCN) has been carried out in order to establish the presence and identity of distal residues in the heme pocket. In the absence of the usual distal E7 His in Aplysia Mb (E7 Val), the sequence-specific assignment of the E7 and E10 residues, together with their hyperfine shift patterns, relaxivities and dipolar connectivities to each other and the remainder of the E helix, reveal that the E10 Arg is turned into the pocket and hydrogen bonds to the bound cyanide group. We have previously found a similar rearrangement of the E10 Arg in Aplysia fluoro metMyoglobin, and the stabilizing effect of this residue was proposed to be responsible for the slow rate of cyanide dissociation from rapidly reduced ferrous Aplysia myoglobin. Based on the similar distal E7 His hydrogen-bonding interaction to the bound ligand in the crystal of sperm whale MbO2 and in solution of its cyano met complex, we propose that the E10 Arg similarly hydrogen bonds to the bound O2 in Aplysia MbO2 and accounts for its strong ligand binding and slow dissociation rate.  相似文献   

2.
The x-ray crystal structure of the fluoride derivative of ferric sperm whale (Physeter catodon) myoglobin (Mb) has been determined at 2.5 A resolution (R = 0.187) by difference Fourier techniques. The fluoride anion, sitting in the central part of the heme distal site and coordinated to the heme iron, is hydrogen bonded to the distal His(64)E7 NE2 atom and to the W195 solvent water molecule. This water molecule also significantly interacts with the same HisE7 residue, which stabilizes the coordinated fluoride ion. Moreover, fluoride and formate binding to ferric Aplysia limacina Mb, sperm whale (Physeter catodon) Mb, horse (Caballus caballus) Mb, loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) Mb, and human hemoglobin has been investigated by 1H-NMR relaxometry. A strong solvent proton relaxation enhancement is observed for the fluoride derivatives of hemoproteins containing HisE7. Conversely, only a small outer-sphere contribution to the solvent relaxation rate has been observed for all of the formate derivatives considered and for the A. limacina Mb:fluoride derivative, where HisE7 is replaced by Val.  相似文献   

3.
The X-ray crystal structure of the fluoride derivative of Aplysia limacina ferric myoglobin has been solved and refined at 2.0 A resolution; the crystallographic R-factor is 13.6%. The fluoride ion binds to the sixth co-ordination position of the heme iron, 2.2 A from the metal. Binding of the negatively charged ligand on the distal side of the heme pocket of this myoglobin, which lacks the distal His, is associated with a network of hydrogen bonds that includes the fluoride ion, the residue Arg66 (E10), the heme propionate III, three ordered water molecules and backbone or side-chain atoms from the CD region. A comparison of fluoride and oxygen dissociation rate constants of A. limacina myoglobin, sperm whale (Physeter catodon) myoglobin and Glycera dibranchiata monomeric hemoglobin, suggests that the conformational readjustment of Arg66 (E10) in A. limacina myoglobin may represent the molecular basis for ligand stabilization, in the absence of a hydrogen-bond donor residue at the distal E7 position.  相似文献   

4.
Aplysia limacina myoglobin lacks the distal histidine (His (E7)) and displays a ligand stabilization mechanism based on Arg(E10). The double mutant Val(E7)His-Arg(E10)Thr has been prepared to engineer the role of His(E7), typical of mammalian myoglobins, in a different globin framework. The 2.0 A crystal structure of Val(E7)His-Arg(E10)Thr met-Mb mutant reveals that the His(E7) side chain points out of the distal pocket, providing an explanation for the observed failure to stabilize the Fe(II) bound oxygen in the ferrous myoglobin. Moreover, spectroscopic analysis together with kinetic data on azide binding to met-myoglobin are reported and discussed in terms of the presence of a water molecule at coordination distance from the heme iron.  相似文献   

5.
The absorption and resonance Raman spectra and the azide binding kinetics of ferric horse heart myoglobin (Mb) and mini myoglobin (a chemically truncated form of horse heart Mb containing residues 32-139) have been compared. The steady-state spectra show that an additional six-coordinated low-spin form (not present in entire horse heart Mb, which is purely six-coordinated high spin) predominates in mini Mb. The distal histidine is possibly the sixth ligand in this species. The presence of two species corresponds to a kinetic biphasicity for mini Mb that is not observed for horse heart Mb. Azide binds to horse heart Mb much more slowly than to sperm whale Mb. This difference may result from a sterically hindered distal pocket in horse heart Mb. In both cases, the rate constants level off at high azide concentrations, implying the existence of a rate-limiting step (likely referable to the dissociation of the axial sixth ligand). The faster rate constant of mini Mb is similar to that of sperm whale Mb, whereas the slower one is similar to that of entire horse heart Mb.  相似文献   

6.
Peroxide-induced oxidative modifications of haem proteins such as myoglobin and haemoglobin can lead to the formation of a covalent bond between the haem and globin. These haem to protein cross-linked forms of myoglobin and haemoglobin are cytotoxic and have been identified in pathological conditions in vivo. An understanding of the mechanism of haem to protein cross-link formation could provide important information on the mechanisms of the oxidative processes that lead to pathological complications associated with the formation of these altered myoglobins and haemoglobins. We have re-examined the mechanism of the formation of haem to protein cross-link to test the previously reported hypothesis that the haem forms a covalent bond to the protein via the tyrosine 103 residue (Catalano, C. E., Choe, Y. S., Ortiz de Montellano, P. R., J. Biol. Chem. 1989, 10534 - 10541). Comparison of native horse myoglobin, recombinant sperm whale myoglobin and Tyr(103) --> Phe sperm whale mutant shows that, contrary to the previously proposed mechanism of haem to protein cross-link formation, the absence of tyrosine 103 has no impact on the formation of haem to protein cross-links. In contrast, we have found that engineered myoglobins that lack the distal histidine residue either cannot generate haem to protein cross-links or show greatly suppressed levels of modified protein. Moreover, addition of a distal histidine to myoglobin from Aplysia limacina, that naturally lacks this histidine, restores the haem protein's capacity to generate haem to protein cross-links. The distal histidine is, therefore, vital for the formation of haem to protein cross-link and we explore this outcome.  相似文献   

7.
J T Lecomte  G N La Mar 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7388-7395
The exchange rates of heme cavity histidine nitrogen-bound protons in horse and dog metcyanomyoglobins have been determined at 40 degrees C as a function of pH by 1H NMR spectroscopy. They were compared to the results reported for the sperm whale homologue [Cutnell, J. D., La Mar, G. N., & Kong, S. B. (1981) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103, 3567-3572]. The rate profiles suggest that the exchange follows EX2-type kinetics, and the relative rate values favor a penetration model over a local unfolding model. It was found that the behavior of protons located on the proximal side of the heme is similar in the three proteins. The distal histidyl imidazole NH, however, shows a highly accelerated hydroxyl ion catalyzed rate in horse and dog myoglobins relative to that in sperm whale myoglobin. NMR spectral and relaxational characteristics of the assigned heme cavity protons indicate that the global geometry of the heme pocket is highly conserved in the ground-state structure of the three proteins. We propose a model that attributes the different distal histidine exchange behavior to the relative dynamic stability of the distal heme pocket in dog or horse myoglobin vs. sperm whale myoglobin. This model involves a dynamic equilibrium between a closed heme pocket as found in metaquomyoglobin [Takano, T. (1977) J. Mol. Biol. 110, 537-568] and an open pocket as found in phenylmetmyoglobin [Ringe, D., Petsko, G. A., Kerr, D. E., & Ortiz de Montellano, P. R. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 2-4].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Three mutant proteins of sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) that exhibit altered axial ligations were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis of a synthetic gene for sperm whale myoglobin. Substitution of distal pocket residues, histidine E7 and valine E11, with tyrosine and glutamic acid generated His(E7)Tyr Mb and Val(E11)Glu Mb. The normal axial ligand residue, histidine F8, was also replaced with tyrosine, resulting in His(F8)Tyr Mb. These proteins are analogous in their substitutions to the naturally occurring hemoglobin M mutants (HbM). Tyrosine coordination to the ferric heme iron of His(E7)Tyr Mb and His(F8)Tyr Mb is suggested by optical absorption and EPR spectra and is verified by similarities to resonance Raman spectral bands assigned for iron-tyrosine proteins. His(E7)Tyr Mb is high-spin, six-coordinate with the ferric heme iron coordinated to the distal tyrosine and the proximal histidine, resembling Hb M Saskatoon [His(beta E7)Tyr], while the ferrous iron of this Mb mutant is high-spin, five-coordinate with ligation provided by the proximal histidine. His(F8)Tyr Mb is high-spin, five-coordinate in both the oxidized and reduced states, with the ferric heme iron liganded to the proximal tyrosine, resembling Hb M Iwate [His(alpha F8)Tyr] and Hb M Hyde Park [His(beta F8)Tyr]. Val(E11)Glu Mb is high-spin, six-coordinate with the ferric heme iron liganded to the F8 histidine. Glutamate coordination to the ferric iron of this mutant is strongly suggested by the optical and EPR spectral features, which are consistent with those observed for Hb M Milwaukee [Val(beta E11)Glu]. The ferrous iron of Val(E11)Glu Mb exhibits a five-coordinate structure with the F8 histidine-iron bond intact.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Haem disorder in two myoglobins: comparison of reorientation rate.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The globins from sperm whale and from Aplysia limacina myoglobins were reconstituted by addition of stoichiometric ferric protohaem and the Soret c.d. was followed as a function of time. For both reconstituted proteins, the Soret c.d. changes with time, reflecting haem reorientation inside its pocket, as previously described [Aojula, Wilson & Drake (1986) Biochem. J. 237, 613-616] for sperm whale myoglobin. The time course of the c.d. transition is found to be approx. 10 times faster in Aplysia than in sperm whale myoglobin, a result which is in agreement with the known structural and physicochemical properties of the two myoglobins; furthermore, these results confirm that c.d. and n.m.r. data on haem orientation in haemoproteins reflect the same molecular phenomenon.  相似文献   

10.
We carried out the flash photolysis of oxy complexes of sperm whale myoglobin, cobalt-substituted sperm whale myoglobin, and Aplysia myoglobin. When the optical absorption spectral changes associated with the O2 rebinding were monitored on the nanosecond to millisecond time scale, we found that the transient spectra of the O2 photoproduct of sperm whale myoglobin were significantly different from the static spectra of deoxy form. This was sharply contrasted with the observations that the spectra of the CO photoproduct of sperm whale myoglobin and of the O2 photoproducts of cobalt-substituted sperm whale myoglobin and Aplysia myoglobin are identical to the corresponding spectra of their deoxy forms. These results led us to suggest the presence of a fairly stable transient species in the O2 photodissociation from the oxy complex of sperm whale myoglobin, which has a protein structure different from the deoxy form. We denoted the O2 photo-product to be Mb*. In the time-resolved resonance Raman measurements, the nu Fe-His mode of Mb* gave the same value as that of the deoxy form, indicating that the difference in the optical absorption spectra is possibly due to the structural difference at the heme distal side rather than those of the proximal side. The structure of Mb* is discussed in relation to the dynamic motion of myoglobin in the O2 entry to or exit from the heme pocket. Comparing the structural characteristics of several myoglobins employed, we suggested that the formation of Mb* relates to the following two factors: a hydrogen bonding of O2 with the distal histidine, and the movement of iron upon the ligation of O2.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of increasing concentrations of several anions on the azide (N(-)(3)) binding properties of sperm whale and horse ferric myoglobin has been studied. Surprisingly, a number of anions may act as heterotropic effectors, decreasing the affinity of myoglobins for N(-)(3), in the following order: ClO(-)(4)=I(-)>Br(-)>Cl(-) and SO(2-)(4), which mirrors the increase in their charge density. The largest effects were measured using ClO(-)(4) and I(-), which produce a 4-fold and 8-fold reduction of the N(-)(3) binding affinity in horse and sperm whale myoglobins, respectively. A dissociation equilibrium constant (K(d)) ranging from 150 to 250 mM was estimated for ClO(-)(4) and I(-) binding to myoglobins. In order to analyse the molecular mechanism producing the reduction of the N(-)(3) binding affinity to ferric myoglobin, the potential anionic binding sites within ferric myoglobin were investigated by a molecular modelling study using the program Grid. Analysis of the theoretical results suggests two particularly favourable binding sites: the first, next to the distal side of the haem, whose occupancy might alter the electrostatic potential surrounding the bound N(-)(3); the second, involving residues of helices B and G which are far from the haem iron atom, thus implying a long range effect on the bound N(-)(3). Based on the evidence that no significant conformational changes are found in the three-dimensional structures of N(-)(3)-free and N(-)(3)-bound myoglobin and on previous results on N(-)(3) binding to ferric myoglobin mutants in CD3 positions, we favour the first hypothesis, suggesting that the functional heterotropic modulation of monomeric myoglobin is mainly depending on a decrease of the positive charge density induced by the binding of anions to the haem distal side.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Association and dissociation rate constants were measured for O2, CO, and alkyl isocyanide binding to a set of genetically engineered sperm whale myoglobins with site-specific mutations at residue 64 (the E7 helical position). Native His was replaced by Gly, Val, Leu, Met, Phe, Gln, Arg, and Asp using the synthetic gene and expression system developed by Springer and Sligar (Springer, B. A., and Sligar, S. G. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 84, 8961-8965). The His64----Gly substitution produced a sterically unhindered myoglobin that exhibited ligand binding parameters similar to those of chelated protoheme suspended in soap micelles. The order of the association rate constants for isocyanide binding to the mutant myoglobins was Gly64 (approximately 10(7) M-1 s-1) much greater than Val64 approximately Leu64 (approximately 10(6) M-1 s-1) greater than Met64 greater than Phe64 approximately His64 approximately Gln64 (10(5)-10(3) M-1 s-1) and indicates that the barrier to isocyanide entry into the distal pocket is primarily steric in nature. The bimolecular rates of methyl, ethyl, n-propyl, and n-butyl isocyanide binding to the His64----Arg and His64----Asp mutants were abnormally high (1-5 x 10(6) M-1 s-1), suggesting that Arg64 and Asp64 adopt conformations with the charged side chains pointing out toward the solvent creating a less hindered pathway for ligand binding. In contrast to the isocyanide data, the association rate constants for O2 and CO binding exhibited little dependence on the size of the E7 side chain. The values for all the mutants except His64----Gln approached or were larger than those for chelated model heme (i.e. approximately 1 x 10(8) M-1 s-1 for O2 and approximately 1 x 10(7) M-1 s-1 for CO), whereas the corresponding rate parameters for myoglobin containing either Gln64 or His64 were 5- to 10-fold smaller. This result suggests that a major kinetic barrier for O2 and CO binding to native myoglobin may involve disruption of polar interactions between His64 and water molecules found in the distal pocket of deoxymyoglobin. Finally, the rate and equilibrium parameters for O2 and CO binding to the His64----Gln, His64----Val, and His64----Leu mutants were compared to those reported previously for Asian elephant myoglobin (Gln-E7), Aplysia limacina myoglobin (Val-E7), and monomeric Hb II from Glycera dibranchiata (Leu-E7).  相似文献   

14.
Solution 1H NMR spectroscopy was used to investigate the heme active-site structure and dynamics of rotation about the Fe-His bond of centrosymmetric etioheme-I reconstituted into sperm whale and horse myoglobin (Mb). Comparison of the NOESY cross-peak pattern and paramagnetic relaxation properties of the cyanomet complexes confirm a heme pocket that is essentially the same as Mb with either native protoheme or etioheme-I. Dipolar contacts between etioheme and the conserved heme pocket residues establish a unique seating of etioheme that conserves the orientation of the N-Fe-N vector relative to the axial His plane, with ethyl groups occupying the vinyl positions of protoheme. Saturation transfer between methyls on adjacent pyrroles in etioheme-reconstituted horse Mb in all accessible oxidation/spin states reveals rotational hopping rates that decrease dramatically with either loss of ligands or reduction of the heme, and correlate qualitatively with expectations based on the Fe-His bond strength and the rate of heme dissociation from Mb. The rate of hopping for etioheme in metMbCN, in contrast to hemes with propionates, is the same in the sperm whale and horse proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Two-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy over a range of temperature through thermal unfolding has been applied to the low-spin, ferric cyanide complex of myoglobin from Aplysia limacina to search for intermediates in the unfolding and to characterize the effect of temperature on the magnetic properties and electronic structure of the heme iron. The observation of strictly linear behavior from 5 to 80 C degrees through the unfolding transition for all hyperfine-shifted resonances indicates the absence of significant populations of intermediate states to the cooperative unfolding with Tm approximately 80 degrees C. The magnetic anisotropies and orientation of the magnetic axes for the complete range of temperatures were also determined for the complex. The anisotropies have very similar magnitudes, and exhibit the expected characteristic temperature dependence, previously observed in the isoelectronic sperm whale myoglobin complex. In contrast to sperm whale Mb, where the orientation of the magnetic axis was completely temperature-independent, the tilt of the major magnetic axis, which correlates with the Fe-CN tilt, decreases at high temperature in Aplysia limacina Mb, indicating a molecular structure that is conserved with temperature, although more plastic than that of sperm whale Mb. The pattern of contact shifts reflects a conserved Fe-His(F8) bond and pi-spin delocalization into the heme, as expected for the orientation of the axial His imidazole.  相似文献   

16.
The sea hare Aplysia limacina possesses a myoglobin in which a distal H-bond is provided by Arg E10 rather than the common His E7. Solution (1)H NMR studies of the cyanomet complexes of true wild-type (WT), recombinant wild-type (rWT), and the V(E7)H/R(E10)T and V(E7)H mutants of Aplysia Mb designed to mimic the mammalian Mb heme pocket reveal that the distal His in the mutants is rotated out of the heme pocket and is unable to provide a stabilizing H-bond to bound ligand and that WT and rWT differ both in the thermodynamics of heme orientational disorder and in heme contact shift pattern. The mean of the four heme methyl shifts is shown to serve as a sensitive indicator of variations in distal H-bonding among a set of mutant cyanomet globins. The heme pocket perturbations in rWT relative to WT were traced to the absence of the N-terminal acetyl group in rWT that participates in an H-bond to the EF corner in WT. Analysis of dipolar contacts between heme and axial His and between heme and the protein matrix reveal a small approximately 2 degrees rotation of the axial His in rWT relative to true WT and a approximately 3 degrees rotation of the heme in the double mutant relative to rWT Mb. It is demonstrated that both the direction and magnitude of the rotation of the axial His relative to the heme can be determined from the change in the pattern of the contact-dominated heme methyl shift and from the dipolar-dominated heme meso-H shift. However, only NOE data can determine whether it is the His or heme that actually rotates in the protein matrix.  相似文献   

17.
We purified myoglobin from beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas) muscle (longissimus dorsi) with size exclusion and cation exchange chromatographies. The molecular mass was determined by mass spectrometry (17,081 Da) and the isoelectric pH (9.4) by capillary isoelectric focusing. The near-complete amino acid sequence was determined and a phylogeny indicated that beluga was in the same clad as Dall's and harbor porpoises. There were consensus motifs for a phosphorylation site on the protein surface with the most likely site at serine-117. This motif was common to all cetacean myoglobins examined. Two oxygen-binding studies at 37 degrees C indicated dissociation constants (20.5 and 23.6 microM) 5.7-6.6 times larger than horse myoglobin (3.6 microM). The autoxidation rate of beluga myoglobin at 37 degrees C, pH 7.2 was 0.218+/-0.028 h(-1), 1/3 larger than reported for myoglobin of terrestrial mammals. There was no clear sequence change to explain the difference in oxygen binding or autoxidation although substitutions (N66 and T67) in an invariant rich sequence (HGNTV) distal to the heme may play a role. Structural models based on the protein sequence and constructed on topologies of known templates (horse and sperm whale crystal structures) were not adequate to assess perturbation of the heme pocket.  相似文献   

18.
Overall association and dissociation rate constants were measured at 20 degrees C for O2, CO, and alkyl isocyanide binding to position 45 (CD3) mutants of pig and sperm whale myoglobins and to sperm whale myoglobin reconstituted with protoheme IX dimethyl ester. In pig myoglobin, Lys45(CD3) was replaced with Arg, His, Ser, and Glu; in sperm whale myoglobin, Arg45(CD3) was replaced with Ser and Gly. Intramolecular rebinding of NO, O2, and methyl isocyanide to Arg45, Ser45, Glu45, and Lys45(native) pig myoglobins was measured following 35-ps and 17-ns excitation pulses. The shorter, picosecond laser flash was used to examine ligand recombination from photochemically produced contact pairs, and the longer, nanosecond flash was used to measure the rebinding of ligands farther removed from the iron atom. Mutations at position 45 or esterification of the heme did not change significantly (less than or equal to 2-fold) the overall association rate constants for NO, CO, and O2 binding at room temperature. These data demonstrate unequivocally that Lys(Arg)45 makes little contribution to the outer kinetic barrier for the entry of diatomic gases into the distal pocket of myoglobin, a result that contradicts a variety of previous structural and theoretical interpretations. However, the rates of geminate recombination of NO and O2 and the affinity of myoglobin for O2 were dependent upon the basicity of residue 45. The series of substitutions Arg45, Lys45, Ser45, and Glu45 in pig myoglobin led to a 3-fold decrease in the initial rate for the intramolecular, picosecond rebinding of NO and 4-fold decrease in the geminate rate constant for the nanosecond rebinding of O2. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectral characteristics of the cyano-Met form of Chironomus thummi thummi monomeric hemoglobins I, III and IV in 1H2O solvent are reported. A set of four exchangeable hyperfine-shifted resonances is found for each of the two heme-insertion isomers in the hyperfine-shifted region downfield of ten parts per million. An analysis of relaxation, exchange rates and nuclear Overhauser effects leads to assignments for all these resonances to histidine F8 and the side-chains of histidine E7 and arginine FG3. It is evident that in aqueous solution, the side-chain from histidine E7 does not occupy two orientations, as found for the solid state, rather the histidine E7 side-chain adopts a conformation similar to that of sperm whale myoglobin or hemoglobin A, oriented into the heme pocket and in contact with the bound ligand. Evidence is presented to show that the allosteric transition in the Chironomus thummi thummi hemoglobins arises from the "trans effect". An analysis of the exchange with bulk solvent of the assigned histidine E7 labile proton confirms that the group is completely buried within the heme pocket in a manner similar to that found for sperm whale cyano-Met myoglobin, and that the transient exposure to solvent is no more likely than in mammalian myoglobins with the "normal" distal histidine orientation. Finally, a comparison of solvent access to the heme pocket of the three monomeric C. thummi thummi hemoglobins, as measured from proton exchange rates of heme pocket protons, is made and correlated to binding studies with the diffusible small molecules such as O2.  相似文献   

20.
Carbon monoxide and dioxygen were employed as resonance Raman-visible ligands for probing the nature of the heme-binding site in elephant myoglobin, which has glutamine in the distal position (E7) instead of the usual histidine. The distal histidine (E7) residue has been thought to be responsible for weakening carbon monoxide binding to hemoproteins. It is of interest to see how the His(E7)----Gln replacement affects such parameters as nu(Fe-N epsilon), nu(Fe-CO), delta(Fe-C-O), nu(C-O), delta(Fe-O-O), and nu(O-O) vibrational frequencies and relative intensities. Elephant myoglobin has a CO affinity approximately 6 times higher than that for human/sperm whale myoglobin (Mb). If this enhanced affinity were solely due to the removal of some of the steric hindrance that normally tilts the CO off the heme axis, one would expect the nu(Fe-CO) frequency to decrease and the nu(C-O) frequency to increase relative to the corresponding values in sperm whale Mb. However, the opposite was found. In addition, strong enhancement of the Fe-C-O bending mode was observed. These results suggest that the Fe-C-O linkage remains distorted. In elephant Mb, new interactions resulting from the conformational change accompanying ligand binding may be responsible for the increased CO binding. Similar spectra were obtained for elephant and sperm whale oxymyoglobin. This suggests that the interactions of bound O2 are not markedly affected by the glutamine replacement.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号