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1.
Azotobacter vinelandii is an obligately aerobic bacterium in which aerotolerant dinitrogen fixation requires cytochrome bd. This oxidase comprises two polypeptide subunits and three hemes, but no copper, and has been studied extensively. However, there remain apparently conflicting reports on the reactivity of the high spin heme b(595) with ligands. Using purified cytochrome bd, we show that absorption changes induced by CO photodissociation from the fully reduced cytochrome bd at low temperatures demonstrate binding of the ligand with heme b(595). However, the magnitude of these changes corresponds to the reaction with CO of only about 5% of the heme. CO binding with a minor fraction of heme b(595) is also revealed at room temperature by time-resolved studies of CO recombination. The data resolve the apparent discrepancies between conclusions drawn from room and low temperature spectroscopic studies of the CO reaction with cytochrome bd. The results are consistent with the proposal that hemes b(595) and d form a diheme oxygen-reducing center with a binding capacity for a single exogenous ligand molecule that partitions between the hemes d and b(595) in accordance with their intrinsic affinities for the ligand. In this model, the affinity of heme b(595) for CO is about 20-fold lower than that of heme d.  相似文献   

2.
Bacterial bd-type quinol oxidases, such as cytochrome bd from Escherichia coli, contain three hemes, but no copper. In contrast to heme-copper oxidases and similarly to globins, single electron-reduced cytochrome bd forms stable complexes with O(2), NO and CO at ferrous heme d. Kinetics of ligand dissociation from heme d(2+) in the single electron- and fully-reduced cytochrome bd from E. coli has been investigated by rapid mixing spectrophotometry at 20 degrees C. Data show that (i) O(2) dissociates at 78 s(-1), (ii) NO and CO dissociation is fast as compared to heme-copper oxidases and (iii) dissociation in the single electron-reduced state is hindered as compared to the fully-reduced enzyme. Presumably, rapid ligand dissociation requires reduced heme b(595). As NO, an inhibitor of respiratory oxidases, is involved in the immune response against microbial infection, the rapid dissociation of NO from cytochrome bd may have important bearings on the patho-physiology of enterobacteria.  相似文献   

3.
In the heme-based oxygen sensor Dos from Escherichia coli, one of the axial ligands (Met 95) of a six-coordinate heme can be replaced by external ligands such as O(2), NO, and CO, which causes a switch in phosphodiesterase activity. To gain insight into the bidirectional switching mechanism, we have studied the interaction of ligands with the sensor domain DosH by flash photolysis experiments with femtosecond time resolution. The internal ligand can be photodissociated from the ferrous heme and recombines with time constants of 7 and 35 ps. This is somewhat slower than recombination of the external ligands NO, with which picosecond rebinding occurs with unprecedented efficiency (>99%) with a predominant phase of approximately 5 ps, and O(2) (97% in 5 ps, Liebl, U., Bouzhir-Sima, L., Négrerie, M., Martin, J.-L., and Vos, M. H. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99, 12771-12776). Dissociated CO displays geminate rebinding in 1.5 ns with a very high yield (60%). Together these results indicate that the heme environment provides a very tight pocket for external ligands, presumably preventing frequent switching events. Additional CO dissociation and rebinding experiments on a longer time scale reveal that (a) Met 95 binding, in 100 micros, occurs in competition with bimolecular CO binding, and (b) subsequent replacement of Met 95 by CO on the millisecond time scale occurs faster than in rapid-mixing experiments, suggesting a slow further relaxation. A minimal ligand binding model is proposed that suggests that Met 95 displacement from the heme is facilitated by the presence of an external ligand in the heme environment. Furthermore, the orders of magnitude difference between Met 95 binding after dissociation of internal and external ligands, as well as the spectral characteristics of photodissociation intermediates, indicate substantial rearrangement of the heme environment associated with ligand sensing. Further remarkable observations include evidence for stable (>4 ns) photooxidation of six-coordinate ferrous heme, with a quantum yield of 4-8%.  相似文献   

4.
Absorption and circular dichroism (CD) spectra of cytochrome bd from Escherichia coli have been compared for the wild type enzyme and an inactive mutant in which a highly conserved E445 in subunit I has been replaced by alanine [Zhang, J., Hellwig, P., Osborne, J. P., Huang, H. W., Moenne-Loccoz, P., Konstantinov, A. A., and Gennis, R. B. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 8548-8556]. The absorption bands of ferrous heme b595 are absent from the spectrum of the dithionite-reduced E445A form of cytochrome bd. The difference between the spectra of the dithionite-reduced WT and E445A enzymes indicates that in the mutant, heme b595 is present but is not reducible by dithionite. Cytochrome bd reveals intense CD signals dominated by heme d, with almost no contribution from heme b595 or heme b558. The CD spectrum of the reduced wild type enzyme in the Soret band indicates strong excitonic interactions between ferrous heme d and ferrous heme b595, and these interactions are not observed in dithionite-reduced E445A mutant, in which heme b595 remains in the ferric state. Modeling the excitonic interactions in both absorption and CD spectra has been carried out, yielding an estimate of the Fe-to-Fe distance between heme d and heme b595 of about 10 A. The physical proximity supports the hypothesis that heme d and heme b595 can form a di-heme oxygen reducing site, a unique structure for respiratory oxidases.  相似文献   

5.
A survey is presented of picosecond kinetics of heme-residue bond formation after photolysis of histidine, methionine, or cysteine, in a broad range of ferrous six-coordinate heme proteins. These include human neuroglobin, a bacterial heme-binding superoxide dismutase (SOD), plant cytochrome b 559, the insect nuclear receptor E75, horse heart cytochrome c and the heme domain of the bacterial sensor protein Dos. We demonstrate that the fastest and dominant phase of binding of amino acid residues to domed heme invariably takes place with a time constant in the narrow range of 5-7 ps. Remarkably, this is also the case in the heme-binding SOD, where the heme is solvent-exposed. We reason that this fast phase corresponds to barrierless formation of the heme-residue bond from a configuration close to the bound state. Only in proteins where functional ligand exchange occurs, additional slower rebinding takes place on the time scale of tens of picoseconds after residue dissociation. We propose that the presence of these slower phases reflects flexibility in the heme environment that allows external ligands (O2, CO, NO, . . .) to functionally replace the internal residue after thermal dissociation of the heme-residue bond.  相似文献   

6.
Cytochrome bd is one of the two quinol oxidases in the respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. The enzyme contains three heme prosthetic groups. The dioxygen binding site is heme d, which is thought to be part of the heme-heme binuclear center along with heme b(595), which is a high-spin heme whose function is not known. Protein sequence alignments [Osborne, J. P., and Gennis, R. B. (1999) Biochim. Biophys Acta 1410, 32--50] of cytochrome bd quinol oxidase sequences from different microorganisms have revealed a highly conserved sequence (GWXXXEXGRQPW; bold letters indicate strictly conserved residues) predicted to be on the periplasmic side of the membrane between transmembrane helices 8 and 9 in subunit I. The functional importance of this region is investigated in the current work by site-directed mutagenesis. Several mutations in this region (W441A, E445A/Q, R448A, Q449A, and W451A) resulted in a catalytically inactive enzyme with abnormal UV--vis spectra. E445A was selected for detailed analysis because of the absence of the absorption bands from heme b(595). Detailed spectroscopic and chemical analyses, indeed, show that one of the three heme prosthetic groups in the enzyme, heme b(595), is specifically perturbed and mostly missing from this mutant. Surprisingly, heme d, while known to interact with heme b(595), appears relatively unperturbed, whereas the low-spin heme b(558) shows some modification. This is the first report of a mutation that specifically affects the binding site of heme b(595).  相似文献   

7.
Comparative studies on the interaction of the membrane-bound and detergent-solubilized forms of the enzyme in the fully reduced state with carbon monoxide at room temperature have been carried out. CO brings about a bathochromic shift of the heme d band with a maximum at 644 nm and a minimum at 624 nm, and a peak at 540 nm. In the Soret band, CO binding to cytochrome bd results in absorption decrease and minima at 430 and 445 nm. Absorption perturbations in the Soret band and at 540 nm occur in parallel with the changes at 630 nm and reach saturation at 3-5 microM CO. The peak at 540 nm is probably either beta-band of the heme d-CO complex or part of its split alpha-band. In both forms of cytochrome bd, CO reacts predominantly with heme d. Addition of high CO concentrations to the solubilized cytochrome bd results in additional spectral changes in the gamma-band attributable to the reaction of the ligand with 10-15% of low-spin heme b558. High-spin heme b595 does not bind CO even at high concentrations of the ligand. The apparent dissociation constant values for the heme d-CO complex of the membrane-bound and detergent-solubilized forms of the fully reduced enzyme are about 70 and 80 nM, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome bd is a terminal quinol:O 2 oxidoreductase of the respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. The enzyme generates protonmotive force without proton pumping and contains three hemes, b 558, b 595, and d. A highly conserved glutamic acid residue of transmembrane helix III in subunit I, E107, was suggested to be part of a transmembrane pathway delivering protons from the cytoplasm to the oxygen-reducing site. When E107 is replaced with leucine, the hemes are retained but the ubiquinol-1-oxidase activity is lost. We compared wild-type and E107L mutant enzymes during single turnover using absorption and electrometric techniques with a microsecond time resolution. Both wild-type and E107L mutant cytochromes bd in the fully reduced state bind O 2 rapidly, but the formation of the oxoferryl species in the mutant is dramatically retarded as compared to the wild type. Intraprotein electron redistribution induced by the photolysis of CO bound to ferrous heme d in the one-electron-reduced wild-type enzyme is coupled to the membrane potential generation, whereas the mutant cytochrome bd shows no such potential generation. The E107L mutation also causes decrease of midpoint redox potentials of hemes b 595 and d by 25-30 mV and heme b 558 by approximately 70 mV. There are two protonatable groups redox-linked to hemes b 595 and d in the active site, one of which has been recently identified as E445, whereas the second group remains unknown. Here we propose that E107 is either the second group or a key residue of a proposed proton delivery pathway leading from the cytoplasm toward this second group.  相似文献   

9.
Cytochromes bo and bd are structurally unrelated terminal ubiquinol oxidases in the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. The high-spin heme o-CuB binuclear center serves as the dioxygen reduction site for cytochrome bo, and the heme b595-heme d binuclear center for cytochrome bd. CuB coordinates three histidine ligands and serves as a transient ligand binding site en route to high-spin heme o one-electron donor to the oxy intermediate, and a binding site for bridging ligands like cyanide. In addition, it can protect the dioxygen reduction site through binding of a peroxide ion in the resting state, and connects directly or indirectly Tyr288 and Glu286 to carry out redox-driven proton pumping in the catalytic cycle. Contrary, heme b595 of cytochrome bd participate a similar role to CuB in ligand binding and dioxygen reduction but cannot perform such versatile roles because of its rigid structure.  相似文献   

10.
The quinol-linked cytochrome bd oxidases are terminal oxidases in respiration. These oxidases harbor a low spin heme b(558) that donates electrons to a binuclear heme b(595)/heme d center. The reaction with O(2) and subsequent catalytic steps of the Escherichia coli cytochrome bd-I oxidase were investigated by means of ultra-fast freeze-quench trapping followed by EPR and UV-visible spectroscopy. After the initial binding of O(2), the O-O bond is heterolytically cleaved to yield a kinetically competent heme d oxoferryl porphyrin π-cation radical intermediate (compound I) magnetically interacting with heme b(595). Compound I accumulates to 0.75-0.85 per enzyme in agreement with its much higher rate of formation (~20,000 s(-1)) compared with its rate of decay (~1,900 s(-1)). Compound I is next converted to a short lived heme d oxoferryl intermediate (compound II) in a phase kinetically matched to the oxidation of heme b(558) before completion of the reaction. The results indicate that cytochrome bd oxidases like the heme-copper oxidases break the O-O bond in a single four-electron transfer without a peroxide intermediate. However, in cytochrome bd oxidases, the fourth electron is donated by the porphyrin moiety rather than by a nearby amino acid. The production of reactive oxygen species by the cytochrome bd oxidase was below the detection level of 1 per 1000 turnovers. We propose that the two classes of terminal oxidases have mechanistically converged to enzymes in which the O-O bond is broken in a single four-electron transfer reaction to safeguard the cell from the formation of reactive oxygen species.  相似文献   

11.
Ligand binding to the heme distal side is a paradigm of heme-protein biochemistry, the proximal axial ligand being in most cases a His residue. NO binds to the ferrous heme-Fe-atom giving rise to hexa-coordinated adducts (as in myoglobin and hemoglobin) with His and NO as proximal and distal axial ligands, respectively, or to penta-coordinated adducts (as in soluble guanylate cyclase) with NO as the axial distal ligand. Recently, the ferrous derivative of Alcaligenes xylosoxidans cytochrome c' (Axcyt c') and of cardiolipin-bound horse heart cytochrome c (CL-hhcyt c) have been reported to bind NO to the "dark side" of the heme (i.e., as the proximal axial ligand) replacing the endogenous ligand His. Conversely, CL-free hhcyt c behaves as ferrous myoglobin by binding NO to the heme distal side, keeping His as the proximal axial ligand. Moreover, the ferrous derivative of CL-hhcyt c binds CO at the heme distal side, the proximal axial ligand being His. Furthermore, CL-hhcyt c shows peroxidase activity. In contrast, CL-free hhcyt c does not bind CO and does not show peroxidase activity. This suggests that heme-proteins may utilize both sides of the heme for ligand discrimination, which appears to be modulated allosterically. Here, structural and functional aspects of NO binding to ferrous Axcyt c' and (CL-)hhcyt c are reviewed.  相似文献   

12.
The heme environment and ligand binding properties of two relatively large membrane proteins containing multiple paramagnetic metal centers, cytochrome bo3 and bd quinol oxidases, have been studied by high field proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The oxidized bo3 enzyme displays well-resolved hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR resonance assignable to the low-spin heme b center. The observed spectral changes induced by addition of cyanide to the protein were attributed to the structural perturbations on the low-spin heme (heme b) center by cyanide ligation to the nearby high-spin heme (heme o) of the protein. The oxidized hd oxidase shows extremely broad signals in the spectral region where protons near high-spin heme centers resonate. Addition of cyanide to the oxidized bd enzyme induced no detectable perturbations on the observed hyperfine signals, indicating the insensitive nature of this heme center toward cyanide. The proton signals near the low-spin heme b558 center are only observed in the presence of 20% formamide, consistent with a critical role of viscosity in detecting NMR signals of large membrane proteins. The reduced bd protein also displays hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR signals, indicating that the high-spin heme centers (hemes b595 and d) remain high-spin upon chemical reduction. The results presented here demonstrate that structural changes of one metal center can significantly influence the structural properties of other nearby metal center(s) in large membrane paramagnetic metalloproteins.  相似文献   

13.
Cytochromes bd are terminal oxidases in the respiratory chains of many prokaryotic organisms. They reduce O? to 2H?O at the expense of electrons extracted from quinol. The oxidases can be divided into two subfamilies, L and S, based on the presence of either a long or a short hydrophilic connection between transmembrane helices 6 and 7 in subunit I designated as 'Q-loop'. The L-subfamily members, e.g. the enzyme from Escherichia coli, are relatively well-studied and were shown to generate proton-motive force. The S-subfamily comprises the majority of cytochromes bd including the enzyme from Geobacillus thermodenitrificans but is very poor studied. We compared the properties of cytochromes bd from G. thermodenitrificans and E. coli at room temperature using a combination of absorption, CD and MCD spectroscopy. The G. thermodenitrificans enzyme does contain the high-spin heme b(HS) ("b(595)") despite the fact that its characteristic Q(00)-band ("α"-band) at 595nm is not seen in the absorption spectra; stoichiometry of hemes b(LS), b(HS) and d per the enzyme complex is suggested to be 1:1:1. At 1mM CO, 20-25% of ferrous heme b(HS) in the G. thermodenitrificans oxidase binds the ligand, while in case of the E. coli enzyme such a reaction is minor. In the G. thermodenitrificans oxidase, the excitonic interaction between ferrous hemes b(HS) and d decreased as compared to that in the E. coli bd. The latter may suggest that the two enzymes differ in the distance between heme d and heme b(HS) and/or in the angle between their porphyrin planes.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract Cytochromes d and b 595 were studied by low temperature photodissociation of CO-ligated Azotobacter vinelandii membranes. White light or He-Ne laser irradiation revealed 436 and 594–597 nm absorption bands to be due to Fe11 cytochrome b 595. Oxy-cytochrome d (648 nm) was formed when the CO adduct was photolysed in the presence of oxygen. This was followed by ligand recombination (presumably oxygen) to the high-spin cytochrome b 595, with a distinctive shift to shorter wavelengths of the α-band of the cytochrome, and a decrease in the oxygenated form. All spectral changes were light-reversible. We demonstrate the light-reversible binding of CO to both cytochromes b 595 and d , and suggest migration of oxygen from cytochrome d to cytochrome b 595 at a haem-haem binuclear centre during the oxidase reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Resonance Raman and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy have been utilized to identify histidine as an axial heme ligand in a high spin, heme c-containing protein isolated from the photosynthetic purple sulfur bacterium Chromatium vinosum. Resonance Raman spectroscopy has also been used to characterize the CO adduct of the C. vinosum hemoprotein. Resonance Raman spectra of the heme site obtained within 10 ns of CO photolysis from the ferrous hemoprotein are virtually identical to those of the unligated protein, indicating that there is little or no rearrangement of the heme pocket in response to ligand photolysis. The equilibrium constant for CO binding to the ferrous hemeprotein was measured to be 1.7 X 10(-5) M-1 and the CO association rate constant determined to be 5.4 X 10(3) M-1 S-1. The quantum efficiency for photodissociation of the hemoprotein X CO complex was greater than or equal to 0.9.  相似文献   

16.
Numerous sequences of the cytochrome bd quinol oxidase (cytochrome bd) have recently become available for analysis. The analysis has revealed a small number of conserved residues, a new topology for subunit I and a phylogenetic tree involving extensive horizontal gene transfer. There are 20 conserved residues in subunit I and two in subunit II. Algorithms utilizing multiple sequence alignments predicted a revised topology for cytochrome bd, adding two transmembrane helices to subunit I to the seven that were previously indicated by the analysis of the sequence of the oxidase from E. coli. This revised topology has the effect of relocating the N-terminus and C-terminus to the periplasmic and cytoplasmic sides of the membrane, respectively. The new topology repositions I-H19, the putative ligand for heme b595, close to the periplasmic edge of the membrane, which suggests that the heme b595/heme d active site of the oxidase is located near the outer (periplasmic) surface of the membrane. The most highly conserved region of the sequence of subunit I contains the sequence GRQPW and is located in a predicted periplasmic loop connecting the eighth and ninth transmembrane helices. The potential importance of this region of the protein was previously unsuspected, and it may participate in the binding of either quinol or heme d. There are two very highly conserved glutamates in subunit I, E99 and E107, within the third transmembrane helix (E. coli cytochrome bd-I numbering). It is speculated that these glutamates may be part of a proton channel leading from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane to the heme d oxygen-reactive site, now placed near the periplasmic surface. The revised topology and newly revealed conserved residues provide a clear basis for further experimental tests of these hypotheses. Phylogenetic analysis of the new sequences of cytochrome bd reveals considerable deviation from the 16sRNA tree, suggesting that a large amount of horizontal gene transfer has occurred in the evolution of cytochrome bd.  相似文献   

17.
Under continuous illumination the CO binding curve of reduced carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase maintains the shape of the binding curve in the dark. The apparent dissociation constant calculated from the binding curves at various light intensities is a linear function of the light intensity. Marked differences are observed between the light-induced difference spectra of the fully reduced carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase and the mixed-valence carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase. These differences are enhanced in the presence of ferricyanide as an electron acceptor and are explained by partial oxidation of cytochrome a3 in the mixed-valence enzyme after photodissociation. Upon addition of CO to partially reduced formate cytochrome c oxidase (a2+a3 3+ . HCOOH) the cytochrome a3 2+. CO compound is formed completely with a concomitant oxidation of cytochrome a and the Cu associated with cytochrome a. During photodissociation of the CO compound the formate rebinds to cytochrome a3 and cytochrome a and its associated Cu are simultaneously reduced. These electron transfer processes are fully reversible since in the dark the a3 3+ . HCOOH compound is dissociated slowly with a concomitant formation of the a3 2+ . CO compound and oxidation of cytochrome a. When these experiments are carried out in the presence of cytochrome c, both cytochrome c and cytochrome a are reduced upon illumination of the mixed-valence carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase. In the dark both cytochrome c and cytochrome a are reoxidized when formate dissociates from cytochrome a3 and the a2+ 3 . CO compound is formed back. Thus, in this system we are able to reverse and to modulate the redox state of the different components of the final part of the respiratory chain by light.  相似文献   

18.
FixL is a bacterial heme-based oxygen sensor, in which release of oxygen from the sensing PAS domain leads to activation of an associated kinase domain. Static structural studies have suggested an important role of the conserved residue arginine 220 in signal transmission at the level of the heme domain. To assess the role of this residue in the dynamics and properties of the initial intermediates in ligand release, we have investigated the effects of R220X (X = I, Q, E, H, or A) mutations in the FixLH heme domain on the dynamics and spectral properties of the heme upon photolysis of O(2), NO, and CO using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Comparison of transient spectra for CO and NO dissociation with steady-state spectra indicated less strain on the heme in the ligand dissociation species for all mutants compared to the wild type (WT). For CO and NO, the kinetics were similar to those of the wild type, with the exception of (1) a relatively low yield of picosecond NO rebinding to R220A, presumably related to the increase in the free volume of the heme pocket, and (2) substantial pH-dependent picosecond to nanosecond rebinding of CO to R220H, related to formation of a hydrogen bond between CO and histidine 220. Upon excitation of the complex bound with the physiological sensor ligand O(2), a 5-8 ps decay phase and a nondecaying (>4 ns) phase were observed for WT and all mutants. The strong distortion of the spectrum associated with the decay phase in WT is substantially diminished in all mutant proteins, indicating an R220-induced role of the heme in the primary intermediate in signal transmission. Furthermore, the yield of dissociated oxygen after this phase ( approximately 10% in WT) is increased in all mutants, up to almost unity in R220A, indicating a key role of R220 in caging the oxygen near the heme through hydrogen bonding. Molecular dynamics simulations corroborate these findings and suggest motions of O(2) and arginine 220 away from the heme pocket as a second step in the signal pathway on the 50 ps time scale.  相似文献   

19.
Partial purification of a cytochrome bd complex from Azotobacter vinelandii grown under high aeration was achieved by isolating respiratory particles enriched in this hemoprotein via differential centrifugation and detergent extraction. The cytochrome bd complex was subsequently solubilized from the inner membrane with dodecyl maltoside and purified to near homogeneity via DEAE-Sepharose chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the complex consisted of two subunits, with sizes in good agreement with those predicted from the cloned cyd locus (59.7 and 42 kDa). Spectral analysis of the purified complex indicated that the heme components present were cytochromes b560, b595, and d; CO difference spectral studies identified cytochrome d as a CO-reactive component. The complex had a Km for ubiquinol-1 approximately seven times larger than that for the analogous bd complex from Escherichia coli, and O2 consumption curves revealed a Km value for O2 three times greater than that which we determined for the E. coli bd complex.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated dynamic events after flash photolysis of CO from reduced cytochrome cd(1) nitrite reductase (NiR) from Paracoccus pantotrophus (formerly Thiosphaera pantotropha). Upon pulsed illumination of the cytochrome cd(1)-CO complex, at 460 nm, a rapid (<50 ns) absorbance change, attributed to dissociation of CO, was observed. This was followed by a biphasic rearrangement with rate constants of 1.7 x 10(4) and 2.5 x 10(3) s(-1) at pH 8.0. Both parts of the biphasic rearrangement phases displayed the same kinetic difference spectrum in the region of 400-660 nm. The slower of the two processes was accompanied by proton uptake from solution (0.5 proton per active site at pH 7.5-8.5). After photodissociation, the CO ligand recombined at a rate of 12 s(-1) (at 1 mM CO and pH 8.0), accompanied by proton release. The crystal structure of reduced cytochrome cd(1) in complex with CO was determined to a resolution of 1.57 A. The structure shows that CO binds to the iron of the d(1) heme in the active site. The ligation of the c heme is unchanged in the complex. A comparison of the structures of the reduced, unligated NiR and the NiR-CO complex indicates changes in the puckering of the d(1) heme as well as rearrangements in the hydrogen-bonding network and solvent organization in the substrate binding pocket at the d(1) heme. Since the CO ligand binds to heme d(1) and there are structural changes in the d(1) pocket upon CO binding, it is likely that the proton uptake or release observed after flash-induced CO dissociation is due to changes of the protonation state of groups in the active site. Such proton-coupled structural changes associated with ligand binding are likely to affect the redox potential of heme d(1) and may regulate the internal electron transfer from heme c to heme d(1).  相似文献   

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