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1.
Vibrational frequencies associated with FeC and CO stretching and FeCO bending modes have been determined via resonance Raman (RR) and infrared (IR) spectroscopy for cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) mutants prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. These include the bacterial "wild type", CCP(MI), and mutations involving groups on the proximal (Asp-235----Asn; Trp-191---Phe) and distal (Trp-51----Phe; Arg-48----Leu and Lys) side of the heme. The data were analyzed with the aid of a recently established correlation between nu FeC and nu CO, which can be used to distinguish between back-bonding and axial ligand donor effects. At high pH all adducts showed essentially the same vibrational pattern (form I') with nu FeC approximately 505 cm-1, nu CO approximately 1948 cm-1, and delta FeCO (weak RR band) approximately 576 cm-1. These frequencies are very similar to those shown by the myoglobin CO adduct and imply a "normal" H-bond of the proximal histidine. At pH 7 (pH 6 for Asn-235 and Leu-48), different forms are seen for different proteins: form I (nu FeC approximately 500 cm-1, nu CO = 1922-1941 cm-1, and delta FeCO approximately 580 cm-1, very weak) in the case of CCP(MI) and Phe-191, as well as bakers' yeast CCP, or form II (nu FeC approximately 530 cm-1, nu CO = 1922-1933 cm-1, and delta FeCO = 585 cm-1, moderately strong) for Asn-235 and Phe-51.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra are reported for CO-bound cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP). At low pH, two forms are observed: form II, with nu Fe-C = 530 cm-1 and delta FeCO = 585 cm-1, and form I, with nu Fe-C = 495 cm-1 and no detectable delta FeCO. They appear to have coincident nu CO infrared bands, at 1922 cm-1. These low-pH forms, similar to those observed for horseradish peroxidase (HRP), are attributed to tilted, H-bonded CO and perpendicular CO, respectively. The frequencies differ between the two proteins, a weaker H bond to CO being indicated for CCP. As with HRP, the equilibrium between forms I and II is shifted toward the latter at increasing CO concentrations, suggesting that secondary binding of CO perturbs the distal residues. At high pH [8.4, tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane buffer] the form II fraction converts to another form, II', with nu FeC = 503 cm-1, delta FeCO = 575 cm-1, and nu CO = 1948 cm-1; a tilted, non-H-bonded geometry is suggested. If phosphate buffer is used, however, form II (H bonded) persists at pH 8.4. This result establishes a role for phosphate in stabilizing the H-bonded form of the enzyme; it is suggested that phosphate binds near the distal imidazole and substantially increases its pKa. The conformational state is also influenced by aging. Fresh protein contains purely high spin FeIII heme, as monitored by the high-frequency RR spectrum, and yields form II almost exclusively at elevated CO concentrations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
S H Han  J F Madden  L M Siegel  T G Spiro 《Biochemistry》1989,28(13):5477-5485
The vibrations of the bound diatomic heme ligands CO, CN-, and NO are investigated by resonance Raman spectroscopy in various redox states of Escherichia coli sulfite reductase hemoprotein, and assignments are generated by use of isotopically labeled ligands. For the fully reduced CO complex (ferrous siroheme, reduced Fe4S4 cluster) at room temperature, nu CO is observed at 1904 cm-1, shifting to 1920 cm-1 upon oxidation of the cluster. The corresponding delta FeCO modes are identified at 574 and 566 cm-1, respectively, by virtue of the zigzag pattern of their isotopic shifts. In frozen solution, two species are observed for the cluster-oxidized state, with nu CO at 1910 and 1936 cm-1 and nu FeC at 532 and 504 cm-1, respectively; nu FeC for the fully reduced species is identified at 526 cm-1 in the frozen state. For the ferrous siroheme-NO complex (cluster oxidized), nu NO is identified at 1555 cm-1 in frozen solution and a low-frequency mode is identified at 558 cm-1; this stretching mode is significantly lower than that observed in Mb-NO. For the ferric siroheme cyanide complexes evidence of two ligand-bonding forms is observed, with modes at 451/390 and 451/352 cm-1; they are distinguished by a reversal of the isotopic shift patterns of the upper and lower modes and could arise from a linear and a bent Fe-C unit, respectively. For the ferrous siroheme cyanide complex isotope-sensitive modes observed at 495 and 452 cm-1 are assigned to the FeCN- bending and FeC stretching vibrations, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Lou BS  Snyder JK  Marshall P  Wang JS  Wu G  Kulmacz RJ  Tsai AL  Wang J 《Biochemistry》2000,39(40):12424-12434
Prostaglandin H synthase isoforms 1 and 2 (PGHS-1 and -2) catalyze the first two steps in the biosynthesis of prostaglandins. Resonance Raman spectroscopy was used to characterize the PGHS heme active site and its immediate environment. Ferric PGHS-1 has a predominant six-coordinate high-spin heme at room temperature, with water as the sixth ligand. The proximal histidine ligand (or the distal water ligand) of this hexacoordinate high-spin heme species was reversibly photolabile, leading to a pentacoordinate high-spin ferric heme iron. Ferrous PGHS-1 has a single species of five-coordinate high-spin heme, as evident from nu(2) at 1558 cm(-1) and nu(3) at 1471 cm(-1). nu(4) at 1359 cm(-1) indicates that histidine is the proximal ligand. A weak band at 226-228 cm(-1) was tentatively assigned as the Fe-His stretching vibration. Cyanoferric PGHS-1 exhibited a nu(Fe)(-)(CN) line at 446 cm(-1) and delta(Fe)(-)(C)(-)(N) at 410 cm(-1), indicating a "linear" Fe-C-N binding conformation with the proximal histidine. This linkage agrees well with the open distal heme pocket in PGHS-1. The ferrous PGHS-1 CO complex exhibited three important marker lines: nu(Fe)(-)(CO) (531 cm(-1)), delta(Fe)(-)(C)(-)(O) (567 cm(-1)), and nu(C)(-)(O) (1954 cm(-1)). No hydrogen bonding was detected for the heme-bound CO in PGHS-1. These frequencies markedly deviated from the nu(Fe)(-)(CO)/nu(C)(-)(O) correlation curve for heme proteins and porphyrins with a proximal histidine or imidazolate, suggesting an extremely weak bond between the heme iron and the proximal histidine in PGHS-1. At alkaline pH, PGHS-1 is converted to a second CO binding conformation (nu(Fe)(-)(CO): 496 cm(-1)) where disruption of the hydrogen bonding interactions to the proximal histidine may occur.  相似文献   

5.
J Ramsden  T G Spiro 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3125-3128
The resonance Raman band assigned to Fe--CO stretching in the sperm whale myoglobin CO adduct shifts from 507 cm-1 at neutral pH to 488 cm-1 at low pH, in concert with a shift of the C-O stretching infrared band from 1947 to 1967 cm-1 (Fuchsman & Appleby, 1979), while the 575-cm-1 Fe-C-O bending RR band loses intensity. The pKa that characterizes these changes is approximately 4.4. The vibrational frequencies at low pH are well modeled by the protein-free CO, imidazole adduct of protoheme in a nonpolar solvent while those at high pH are modeled by the adduct of a heme with a covalent strap (Yu et al., 1983) which inhibits upright CO binding. It is inferred that the Fe-C-O unit changes from a tilted to an upright geometry when the distal histidine is protonated, because its side chain swings out of the heme pocket due to electrostatic repulsion with a nearby arginine residue. A different protonation step (pKa = 5.7), which has been shown to modulate the CO rebinding kinetics (Doster et al., 1982) as well as the optical spectrum (Fuchsman & Appleby, 1979), is suggested to involve a global structure change associated with protonation of histidine residues distant from the heme.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of pH upon infrared spectra [CO stretching frequency (vco) region] and visible spectra of the CO complexes of soybean leghemoglobins a, c1, and c2, sperm whale myoglobin, and human hemoglobin A are reported. The vco for leghemoglobin--CO complexes was 1947.5 cm-1 at neutral pH. At acid pH myoglobin-- and hemoglobin--CO complexes developed vco bands at 1966--1968 cm-1, whereas leghemoglobin--CO complexes developed vco bands at approximately 1957 cm-1. All pKapp co values determined by pH-dependent variation of vco fell in the range 4.0--4.6. The pKapp co values determined from visible spectra were consistent with vco-determined values except for that of myoglobin--CO (visible pKapp co = 5.8). The pKapp co values in the 4.0--4.6 range appear to be pK values of the distal histidines, while the visible pKapp co of myoglobin--CO appears to be the pK of a group other than the distal and proximal histidines. The data are consistent with a model in which protonation of the distal histidine permits protein-free heme FeCO geometry in leghemoglobin--CO complexes but not in myoglobin-- or hemoglobin--CO complexes. Thus the heme pockets of leghemoglobins appear to be more flexible than the heme pockets of myoglobin and hemoglobin. The effects of pH upon visible spectra of the O2 complexes of soybean leghemoglobins a, c1, and c2, sperm whale myoglobin, and human hemoglobin A also are reported. pKapp o2 values of approximately 5.5 (leghemoglobins) and 4.4 (hemoglobin) are probably the pK values of the distal histidines. Comparisons of pKapp o2 values with pKapp co values indicate a more flexible heme pocket in leghemoglobins than in hemoglobin. The O2 complex of leghemoglobin c2 differed significantly from the O2 complexes of leghemoglobins a and c1 in visible spectra and titration behavior. These differences might be associated with the small structural differences in the region between the E and F helixes of leghemoglobins.  相似文献   

7.
Laser excitation of alkaline- (pH 8.5) reduced cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) produces resonance Raman (RR) bands arising from both low- and high-spin heme species (nu 3 = 1493/1471 cm-1) even though in the absence of laser excitation the absorption spectrum is characteristic of a purely low-spin species. The high-spin fraction is higher in a stationary than in a rotating sample, indicating that the high-spin contribution arises from photolysis induced by the Raman laser. This conclusion was confirmed by monitoring the absorption spectrum during laser irradiation. Photolability of the low-spin form is somewhat less than that of the CO adduct. The endogenous photolabile ligand is proposed to be the distal histidine residue, His-52. Recent picosecond absorption measurements (Jongeward et al., 1988) show that imidazole ligands in heme proteins do photodissociate but recombine in picoseconds, leading to net photostability on longer time scales. It is proposed that a fraction of the His-52 residues recombine much more slowly in CCP because of protein strain in the ligated form. This strain can also explain the anomalously rapid rate of CO binding to alkaline CCP.  相似文献   

8.
Resonance Raman spectra are reported for FeII and FeIII forms of cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) mutants prepared by site-directed mutagenesis and cloning in Escherichia coli. These include the bacterial "wild type", CCP(MI), and mutations involving groups on the proximal (Asp-235----Asn, Trp-191----Phe) and distal (Trp-51----Phe, Arg-48----Leu and Lys) side of the heme. These spectra are used to assess the spin and ligation states of the heme, via the porphyrin marker band frequencies, especially v3, near 1500 cm-1, and, for the FeII forms, the status of the Fe-proximal histidine bond via its stretching frequency. The FeII-His frequency is elevated to approximately 240 cm-1 in CCP(MI) and in all of the distal mutants, due to hydrogen-bonding interactions between the proximal His-175 N delta and the carboxylate acceptor group on Asp-235. The FeII-His RR band has two components, at 233 and 246 cm-1, which are suggested to arise from populations having H-bonded and deprotonated imidazole; these can be viewed in terms of a double-well potential involving proton transfer coupled to protein conformation. The populations shift with changing pH, possibly reflecting structure changes associated with protonation of key histidine residues, and are influenced by the Leu-48 and Phe-191 mutations. A low-spin FeII form is seen at high pH for the Lys-48, Leu-48, Phe-191, and Phe-51 mutants; for the last three species, coordination of the distal His-52 is suggested by a approximately 200-cm-1 RR band assignable to Fe(imidazole)2 stretching.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The resonance Raman spectra of met-, deoxy-, and (carbonmonoxy)myoglobin (MbCO) are studied as a function of amino acid replacement at the distal histidine-E7 position. The synthetic wild type is found to be spectroscopically identical with the native material. The methionine and glycine replacements do not affect the met or deoxy spectra but do lead to distinct changes in the nu Fe-CO region of the MbCO spectrum. The native MbCO displays a pH-dependent population redistribution of the nu Fe-CO modes, while the analogous population in the mutant systems is found to be pH independent. This indicates that histidine-E7 is the titratable group in native MbCO. Moreover, the pH dependence of the population dynamics is found to be inconsistent with a simple two-state Henderson-Hasselbalch analysis. Instead, we suggest a four-state model involving the coupling of histidine protonation and conformational change. Within this model, the pK of the distal histidine is found to be 6.0 in the "open" configuration and 3.8 in the "closed" conformation. This corresponds to a 3 kcal/mol destabilization of the positively charged distal histidine within the hydrophobic pocket and suggests how protonation can lead to a larger population of the "open" conformation. At pH 7, the pocket is found to be "open" approximately 3% of the time. Further work, involving both IR and Raman measurements, allows the electron-nuclear coupling strengths of the various nu Fe-CO and nu C-O Raman modes to be determined. The slowly rebinding conformational state, corresponding to nu Fe-CO = 518 cm-1 (nu C-O = 1932 cm-1), displays unusually weak coupling of the Fe-CO mode to the Soret transition. Studies of the nu Fe-CO region as a function of temperature reveal that the equilibria between the conformational states are quenched in both the native and glycine mutant below the freezing point of the solvent. Unusual line narrowing of the nu Fe-CO modes at the phase transition is also observed in all samples studied. This line narrowing stands in marked contrast to the other heme Raman modes and suggests that Fe-CO librational motion and/or distal pocket vibrational (or conformational) excitations are involved in the line broadening at room temperature.  相似文献   

10.
The low-frequency FeCN vibrations of cyanoferric myeloperoxidase (MPO) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) have been measured by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The ordering of the frequencies of the predominantly FeC stretching and FeCN bending normal vibrational modes in the two peroxidases differs. These normal mode vibrations are identified by their wavenumber shifts upon isotopic substitution of the cyanide ligand. For MPO, the stretching mode nu 1 (361 cm-1) occurs at a lower frequency than the bending mode delta 2 (454 cm-1). For HRP, the order is reversed as nu 1 (456 cm-1) is at a higher frequency than delta 2 (404 cm-1). Normal coordinate analyses and model complexes have been used to address the origin of this behavior. The nu 1 stretching frequencies in cyanide complexes of iron porphyrin and iron chlorin model compounds are similar to one another and to that of HRP. Thus, the inverted order and altered frequencies of the nu 1 and delta 2 vibrations in MPO, relative to those in HRP and the model compounds, are not inherent to the proposed iron chlorin prosthetic group in MPO but, rather, are attributed to distinct distal environmental effects in the MPO active site. The normal coordinate analyses for MPO and HRP showed that the nu 1 and delta 2 vibrational frequencies are not pure; the potential energy distributions for these modes respond not only to the geometry but also to the force constants of the nu(FeC) and delta(FeCN) internal coordinates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The vibrational infrared absorption changes associated with the oxidation of cytochrome b559 (Cyt b559) have been characterized. In photosystem II (PS II) enriched membranes, low-potential (LP) and high-potential (HP) Cyt b559 were investigated by light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy. The redox transition of isolated Cyt b559 is characterized by protein electrochemistry. On the basis of a model of the assembly of Cyt b559 with the two axial Fe ligands being histidine residues of two distinct polypeptides, each forming a transmembrane alpha-helix [Cramer, W.A., Theg, S.M., & Widger, W.R. (1986) Photosynth. Res. 10, 393-403], the bisimidazole and bismethylimidazole complexes of Fe protoporphyrin IX were electrochemically oxidized and reduced to detect the IR oxidation markers of the heme and its two axial ligands. Major bands at 1674/1553, 1535, and 1240 cm-1 are tentatively assigned to nu 37 (CaCm), nu 38-(CbCb) and delta (CmH) modes, respectively; other bands at 1626, 1613, 1455, 1415, and 1337 cm-1 are assigned to porphyrin skeletal and vinyl modes. Modes at 1103 and 1075/1066 cm-1 are assigned to the 4-methylimidazole and imidazole ligands, respectively. For the isolated Cyt b559, it is shown that both the heme (at 1556-1535, 1337, and 1239 cm-1), the histidine ligands at 1104 cm-1 and the protein (between 1600 and 1700 cm-1 and at 1545 cm-1) are affected by the charge stabilization. The excellent agreement between model compounds and isolated Cyt b559 reinforces the validity of the model of a heme iron coordinated to two histidine residues for Cyt b559. A differential signal at 1656/1641 cm-1 is assigned to peptide C = O mode(s). We speculate that this signal reflects the change in strength of a hydrogen bond formed between the histidine ligand(s) and the polypeptide backbone upon oxidoreduction of the cytochrome. In PS II membranes, the signals characteristic of Cyt b559 photooxidation are found at 1660/1652 and 1625 cm-1, for both the high- and low-potential forms. The differences observed in the amplitude of the 1660/1652-cm-1 band, at 1700 and 1530-1510 cm-1 in the light-induced FTIR difference spectra of Cyt b559 HP and LP, show that the mechanisms of heme oxidation in vivo imply different molecular processes for the two forms Cyt b559 HP and LP.  相似文献   

12.
Carbon monoxide bound to cytochrome c oxidase has been observed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy between 10 K and 280 K in the dark and during and after continuous photolysis. CO bound to a3Fe absorbs near 1963 cm-1, with minor bands at lower frequencies. Photolysis at low temperatures transfers CO to CuB, with the major component near 2062 cm-1 and a minor one near 2043 cm-1. Vibrational absorptions are assigned by comparison with heme and copper carbonyls, by frequency dependence of all bands on the isotopic mass of CO, and by similar behavior of major and minor components with photolysis and relaxation kinetics as a function of temperature. Reformation of a3FeCO after photolysis is an apparent first order process below 210 K with a distribution of rate constants. The kinetics are well described by a power law. Arrhenius behavior is followed between 140 K and 180 K to yield a peak activation enthalpy of 40.3 kJ/mol and a distribution in g(H) = 2.56 kJ/mol (full width at half-maximum). The major component of a3FeCO shows a very narrow CO absorption band (full width at half-maximum = 2.4 cm-1), while that of CuBCO shows a broader CO absorption (full width at half-maximum = 6 cm-1). These data indicate that in the reduced carbon monoxide complex, a3FeCO is in highly ordered nonpolar surroundings sufficiently separated from CuB that it is not perturbed by motion of the latter, while CuBCO is in less ordered, more flexible surroundings.  相似文献   

13.
M Nagai  Y Yoneyama  T Kitagawa 《Biochemistry》1991,30(26):6495-6503
To clarify the role of the proximal histidine (F8-His), distal His (E7-His), and E11 valine (E11-Val) in ligand binding of hemoglobin (Hb), we have investigated the resonance Raman (RR) spectra of the carbon monoxide adduct of Hbs M (COHb M) in which one of these residues was genetically replaced by another amino acid in either the alpha or beta subunit. In the fully reduced state, all Hbs M gave v3 at approximately 1472 cm-1 and vFe-His at 214-218 cm-1, indicating that they have a pentacoordinate heme and the heme iron is bound to either E7-His or F8-His. The porphyrin skeletal vibrations of the COHb M were essentially unaltered by replacements of E7- or F8-His with tyrosine (Tyr) and of E11-Val by glutamic acid (Glu). The vCO, vFe-CO, and delta Fe-C-O frequencies of COHb M Iwate (alpha F8-His----Tyr), COHb M Hyde Park (beta F8-His----Tyr), and COHb M Milwaukee (beta E11-Val----Glu) were nearly identical with those of COHb A. In contrast, the RR spectra of COHb M Boston (alpha E7-His----Tyr) and COHb M Saskatoon (beta E7-His----Tyr) gave two new Raman bands derived from the abnormal subunits, vFe-CO at 490 cm-1 and vCO at 1972 cm-1, in addition to those from the normal subunits at 505 cm-1 (vFe-CO) and 1952 cm-1 (vCO). The CO adduct of the abnormal subunits exhibited apparently no photodissociation upon illumination of CW laser with a stationary cell under which the normal subunit exhibited complete photodissociation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
15.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to investigate the structure and environment of the heme group in bovine liver catalase compound II. Both Soret- and Q-band excitation have been employed to observe and assign the skeletal stretching frequencies of the porphyrin ring. The oxidation state marker band v4 increases in frequency from 1373 cm-1 in ferricatalase to 1375 cm-1 in compound II, consistent with oxidation of the iron atom to the Fe(IV) state. Oxidation of five-coordinate, high-spin ferricatalase to compound II is accompanied by a marked increase of the porphyrin core marker frequencies that is consistent with a six-coordinate low-spin state with a contracted core. An Fe(IV) = O stretching band is observed at 775 cm-1 for compound II at neutral pH, indicating that there is an oxo ligand at the sixth site. At alkaline pH, the Fe(IV) = O stretching band shifts to 786 cm-1 in response to a heme-linked ionization that is attributed to the distal His-74 residue. Experiments carried out in H218O show that the oxo ligand of compound II exchanges with bulk water at neutral pH, but not at alkaline pH. This is essentially the same behavior exhibited by horseradish peroxidase compound II and the exchange reaction at neutral pH for both enzymes is attributed to acid/base catalysis by a distal His residue that is believed to be hydrogen-bonded to the oxo ligand. Thus, the structure and environment of the heme group of the compound II species of catalase and horseradish peroxidase are very similar. This indicates that the marked differences in their reactivities as oxidants are probably due to the manner in which the protein controls access of substrates to the heme group.  相似文献   

16.
Cytoglobin (Cgb) and neuroglobin (Ngb) are the first examples of hexacoordinated globins from humans and other vertebrates in which a histidine (His) residue at the sixth position of the heme iron is an endogenous ligand in both the ferric and ferrous forms. Static and time-resolved resonance Raman and FT-IR spectroscopic techniques were applied in examining the structures in the heme environment of these globins. Picosecond time-resolved resonance Raman (ps-TR3) spectroscopy of transient five-coordinate heme species produced by the photolysis of carbon monoxide (CO) adducts of Cgb and Ngb showed Fe-His stretching (nu(Fe-His)) bands at 229 and 221 cm(-1), respectively. No time-dependent shift in the nu(Fe-His) band of Cgb and Ngb was detected in the 20-1000 ps time domain, in contrast to the case of myoglobin (Mb). These spectroscopic data, combined with previously reported crystallographic data, suggest that the structure of the heme pocket in Cgb and Ngb is altered upon CO binding in a manner different from that of Mb and that the scales of the structural alteration are different for Cgb and Ngb. The structural property of the heme distal side of the ligand-bound forms was investigated by observing the sets of (nu(Fe-CO), nu(C-O), delta(Fe-C-O)) and (nu(Fe-NO), nu(N-O), delta(Fe-N-O)) for the CO and nitric oxide (NO) complexes of Cgb and Ngb. A comparison of the spectra of some distal mutants of Cgb (H81A, H81V, R84A, R84K, and R84T) and Ngb (H64A, H64V, K67A, K67R, and K67T) showed that the CO adducts of Cgb and Ngb contained three conformers and that the distal His (His81 in Cgb and His64 in Ngb) mainly contributes to the interconversion of the conformers. These structural characteristics of Cgb and Ngb are discussed in relation to their ligand binding and physiological properties.  相似文献   

17.
The vibrational energy relaxation of dissociated carbon monoxide in the heme pocket of sperm whale myoglobin has been studied using equilibrium molecular dynamics simulation and normal mode analysis methods. Molecular dynamics trajectories of solvated myoglobin were run at 300 K for both the delta- and epsilon-tautomers of the distal histidine, His64. Vibrational population relaxation times were estimated using the Landau-Teller model. For carbon monoxide (CO) in the myoglobin epsilon-tautomer, for a frequency of omega0 = 2131 cm-1 corresponding to the B1 state, T1epsilon(B1) = 640 +/- 185 ps, and for a frequency of omega0 = 2119 cm-1 corresponding to the B2 state, T1epsilon(B2) = 590 +/- 175 ps. Although the CO relaxation rates in both the epsilon- and delta-tautomers are similar in magnitude, the simulations predict that the vibrational relaxation of the CO is faster in the delta-tautomer. For CO in the myoglobin delta-tautomer, it was found that the relaxation times were identical within error for the two CO substate frequencies, T1delta(B1) = 335 +/- 115 ps and T1delta(B2) = 330 +/- 145 ps. These simulation results are in reasonable agreement with experimental results of Anfinrud and coworkers (unpublished results). Normal mode calculations were used to identify the dominant coupling between the protein and CO molecules. The calculations suggest that the residues of the myoglobin pocket, acting as a first solvation shell to the CO molecule, contribute the primary "doorway" modes in the vibrational relaxation of the oscillator.  相似文献   

18.
The structure of carbon-monoxy (Fe II) myoglobin at 260 K has been solved at a resolution of 1.5 A by X-ray diffraction and a model refined against the X-ray data by restrained least-squares. The CO ligand is disordered and distorted from the linear conformation seen in model compounds. At least two conformations, with Fe--C--O angles of 140 degrees and 120 degrees, are required to model the system. The heme pocket is significantly larger than in deoxy-myoglobin because the distal residues have relaxed around the ligand; the largest displacement occurs for the distal histidine side-chain, which moves more than 1.4 A on ligand binding. The side-chain of Arg45 (CD3) is disordered and apparently exists in two equally populated conformations. One of these does not block the motion of the distal histidine out of the binding pocket, suggesting a mechanism for ligand entry. The heme group is planar (root-mean-square deviation from planarity is 0.08 A) with no doming of the pyrrole groups. The Fe--N epsilon 2 (His93) bond length is 2.2 A and the Fe--C bond length in the CO complex is 1.9 A. The iron is the least-squares plane of the heme, and this leads to the proximal histidine moving by 0.4 A relative to its position in deoxy-myoglobin. This shift correlates with a global structural change, with the proximal part of the molecule translated towards the heme plane.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The 7 ns 436 nm pulses of an H2-shifted YAG laser have been used to photolyze the CO adduct of cytochrome-c peroxidase and produce the resonance Raman spectrum of the photoproduct. A 3 cm-1 downshift, relative to the spectrum of reduced enzyme, was observed for the porphyrin C-N breathing mode, v4. The downshift diminishes with decreasing CO /protein ratio, implying, in conjunction with a recent study of CO binding, that the unrelaxed heme is associated with adduct having a tilted, H-bonded FeCO unit. The downshift is eliminated when the phosphate buffer concentration is increased from 0.01 to 0.1 M. It is proposed that the heme relaxation under study involves a transition between two conformations, B and A, differing in the disposition of the distal residues, and having different v4 frequencies for unligated Fe(II) heme. Conformation B allows H-bonding to bound CO, and is favored at high CO and phosphate concentrations, while conformation A, which is unfavorable to CO H-bonding, is favored at low CO and phosphate concentrations. The recently reported absence of unrelaxed frequencies in the 7 ns photo-product of the CO adduct of horseradish peroxidase has been confirmed, and is attributed to lower stability for conformation B and a smaller A - B v4 difference.  相似文献   

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