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 15 毫秒
1.
YddV from Escherichia coli (Ec) is a novel globin-coupled heme-based oxygen sensor protein displaying diguanylate cyclase activity in response to oxygen availability. In this study, we quantified the turnover numbers of the active [Fe(III), 0.066 min(-1); Fe(II)-O(2) and Fe(II)-CO, 0.022 min(-1)] [Fe(III), Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX complex; Fe(II), Fe(II)-protoporphyrin IX complex] and inactive forms [Fe(II) and Fe(II)-NO, <0.01 min(-1)] of YddV for the first time. Our data indicate that the YddV reaction is the rate-determining step for two consecutive reactions coupled with phosphodiesterase Ec DOS activity on cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP) [turnover number of Ec DOS-Fe(II)-O(2), 61 min(-1)]. Thus, O(2) binding and the heme redox switch of YddV appear to be critical factors in the regulation of c-di-GMP homeostasis. The redox potential and autoxidation rate of heme of the isolated heme domain of YddV (YddV-heme) were determined to be -17 mV versus the standard hydrogen electrode and 0.0076 min(-1), respectively. The Fe(II) complexes of Y43A and Y43L mutant proteins (residues at the heme distal side of the isolated heme-bound globin domain of YddV) exhibited very low O(2) affinities, and thus, their Fe(II)-O(2) complexes were not detected on the spectra. The O(2) dissociation rate constant of the Y43W protein was >150 s(-1), which is significantly larger than that of the wild-type protein (22 s(-1)). The autoxidation rate constants of the Y43F and Y43W mutant proteins were 0.069 and 0.12 min(-1), respectively, which are also markedly higher than that of the wild-type protein. The resonance Raman frequencies representing ν(Fe-O(2)) (559 cm(-1)) of the Fe(II)-O(2) complex and ν(Fe-CO) (505 cm(-1)) of the Fe(II)-CO complex of Y43F differed from those (ν(Fe-O(2)), 565 cm(-1); ν(Fe-CO), 495 cm(-1)) of the wild-type protein, suggesting that Tyr43 forms hydrogen bonds with both O(2) and CO molecules. On the basis of the results, we suggest that Tyr43 located at the heme distal side is important for the O(2) recognition and stability of the Fe(II)-O(2) complex, because the hydroxyl group of the residue appears to interact electrostatically with the O(2) molecule bound to the Fe(II) complex in YddV. Our findings clearly support a role of Tyr in oxygen sensing, and thus modulation of overall conversion from GTP to pGpG via c-di-GMP catalyzed by YddV and Ec DOS, which may be applicable to other globin-coupled oxygen sensor enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
We report the characterization by resonance Raman spectroscopy of the oxygenated complex (Fe(II)O(2)) of nitric-oxide synthases of Staphylococcus aureus (saNOS) and Bacillus subtilis (bsNOS) saturated with N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine. The frequencies of the nu(Fe-O) and nu(O-O) modes were 530 and 1135 cm(-), respectively, in both the presence and absence of tetrahydrobiopterin. On the basis of a comparison of these frequencies with those of saNOS and bsNOS saturated with l-arginine (nu(Fe-O) at 517 cm(-1) and nu(O-O) at 1123 cm(-1)) and those of substrate-free saNOS (nu(Fe-O) at 517 and nu(O-O) at 1135 cm(-1)) (Chartier, F. J. M., Blais, S. P., and Couture, M. (2006) J. Biol. Chem. 281, 9953-9962), we propose two models that account for the frequency shift of nu(Fe-O) (but not nu(O-O)) upon N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine binding as well as the frequency shift of nu(O-O) (but not nu(Fe-O)) upon l-arginine binding. The implications of these substrate-specific interactions with respect to catalysis by NOSs are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
AfGcHK is a globin-coupled histidine kinase that is one component of a two-component signal transduction system. The catalytic activity of this heme-based oxygen sensor is due to its C-terminal kinase domain and is strongly stimulated by the binding of O2 or CO to the heme Fe(II) complex in the N-terminal oxygen sensing domain. Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is an important gaseous signaling molecule and can serve as a heme axial ligand, but its interactions with heme-based oxygen sensors have not been studied as extensively as those of O2, CO, and NO. To address this knowledge gap, we investigated the effects of H2S binding on the heme coordination structure and catalytic activity of wild-type AfGcHK and mutants in which residues at the putative O2-binding site (Tyr45) or the heme distal side (Leu68) were substituted. Adding Na2S to the initial OH-bound 6-coordinate Fe(III) low-spin complexes transformed them into SH-bound 6-coordinate Fe(III) low-spin complexes. The Leu68 mutants also formed a small proportion of verdoheme under these conditions. Conversely, when the heme-based oxygen sensor EcDOS was treated with Na2S, the initially formed Fe(III)–SH heme complex was quickly converted into Fe(II) and Fe(II)–O2 complexes. Interestingly, the autophosphorylation activity of the heme Fe(III)–SH complex was not significantly different from the maximal enzyme activity of AfGcHK (containing the heme Fe(III)–OH complex), whereas in the case of EcDOS the changes in coordination caused by Na2S treatment led to remarkable increases in catalytic activity.  相似文献   

4.
Denitrifying NO reductases are evolutionarily related to the superfamily of heme--copper terminal oxidases. These transmembrane protein complexes utilize a heme-nonheme diiron center to reduce two NO molecules to N(2)O. To understand this reaction, the diiron site has been modeled using sperm whale myoglobin as a scaffold and mutating distal residues Leu-29 and Phe-43 to histidines and Val-68 to a glutamic acid to create a nonheme Fe(B) site. The impact of incorporation of metal ions at this engineered site on the reaction of the ferrous heme with one NO was examined by UV-vis absorption, EPR, resonance Raman, and FTIR spectroscopies. UV--vis absorption and resonance Raman spectra demonstrate that the first NO molecule binds to the ferrous heme, but while the apoproteins and Cu(I)- or Zn(II)-loaded proteins show characteristic EPR signatures of S = 1/2 six-coordinate heme {FeNO}(7) species that can be observed at liquid nitrogen temperature, the Fe(II)-loaded proteins are EPR silent at ≥30 K. Vibrational modes from the heme [Fe-N-O] unit are identified in the RR and FTIR spectra using (15)NO and (15)N(18)O. The apo and Cu(I)-bound proteins exhibit ν(FeNO) and ν(NO) that are only marginally distinct from those reported for native myoglobin. However, binding of Fe(II) at the Fe(B) site shifts the heme ν(FeNO) by 17 cm(-1) and the ν(NO) by -50 cm(-1) to 1549 cm(-1). This low ν(NO) is without precedent for a six-coordinate heme {FeNO}(7) species and suggests that the NO group adopts a strong nitroxyl character stabilized by electrostatic interaction with the nearby nonheme Fe(II). Detection of a similarly low ν(NO) in the Zn(II)-loaded protein supports this interpretation.  相似文献   

5.
FixL of Rhizobium meliloti (RmFixL) is a sensor histidine kinase of the two-component system, which regulates the expression of the genes related to nitrogen fixation in the root nodule in response to the O(2) levels. The crystal structure of the sensor domain of FixL (RmFixLH), which contains a heme (Fe-porphyrin) as a sensing site, was determined at 1.4 A resolution. Based on the structural and spectroscopic analyses, we propose the O(2) sensing mechanism that differs from the case proposed in BjFixLH as follows; conformational changes in the F/G loop, which are induced by steric repulsion between the bent-bound O(2) and the Ile209 side-chain, would be transmitted to the histidine kinase domain. Interaction between the iron-bound O(2) and Ile209 was also observed in the resonance Raman spectra of RmFixLH as evidenced by the fact that the Fe-O(2) and Fe-CN stretching frequencies were shifted from 575 to 570 cm(-1) (Fe-O(2)), and 504 to 499 cm(-1), respectively, as the result of the replacement of Ile209 with an Ala residue. In the I209A mutant of RmFixL, the O(2) sensing activity was destroyed, thus confirming our proposed mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
The Heme Nitric oxide/OXygen binding (H-NOX) family of proteins have important functions in gaseous ligand signaling in organisms from bacteria to humans, including nitric oxide (NO) sensing in mammals, and provide a model system for probing ligand selectivity in hemoproteins. A unique vibrational feature that is ubiquitous throughout the H-NOX family is the presence of a high C-O stretching frequency. To investigate the cause of this spectroscopic characteristic, the Fe-CO and C-O stretching frequencies were probed in the H-NOX domain from Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis (Tt H-NOX) using resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy. Four classes of heme pocket mutants were generated to assess the changes in stretching frequency: (i) the distal H-bonding network, (ii) the proximal histidine ligand, (iii) modulation of the heme conformation via Ile-5 and Pro-115, and (iv) the conserved Tyr-Ser-Arg (YxSxR) motif. These mutations revealed important electrostatic interactions that dampen the back-donation of the Fe(II) d(π) electrons into the CO π* orbitals. The most significant change occurred upon disruption of the H-bonds between the strictly conserved YxSxR motif and the heme propionate groups, producing two dominant CO-bound heme conformations. One conformer was structurally similar to Tt H-NOX WT, whereas the other displayed a decrease in ν(C-O) of up to ~70 cm(-1) relative to the WT protein, with minimal changes in ν(Fe-CO). Taken together, these results show that the electrostatic interactions in the Tt H-NOX binding pocket are primarily responsible for the high ν(C-O) by decreasing the Fe d(π) → CO π* back-donation and suggest that the dominant mechanism by which this family modulates the Fe(II)-CO bond likely involves the YxSxR motif.  相似文献   

7.
HmuO, a heme oxygenase of Corynebacterium diphtheriae, catalyzes degradation of heme using the same mechanism as the mammalian enzyme. The oxy form of HmuO, the precursor of the catalytically active ferric hydroperoxo species, has been characterized by ligand binding kinetics, resonance Raman spectroscopy, and x-ray crystallography. The oxygen association and dissociation rate constants are 5 microm(-1) s(-1) and 0.22 s(-1), respectively, yielding an O(2) affinity of 21 microm(-1), which is approximately 20 times greater than that of mammalian myoglobins. However, the affinity of HmuO for CO is only 3-4-fold greater than that for mammalian myoglobins, implying the presence of strong hydrogen bonding interactions in the distal pocket of HmuO that preferentially favor O(2) binding. Resonance Raman spectra show that the Fe-O(2) vibrations are tightly coupled to porphyrin vibrations, indicating the highly bent Fe-O-O geometry that is characteristic of the oxy forms of heme oxygenases. In the crystal structure of the oxy form the Fe-O-O angle is 110 degrees, the O-O bond is pointed toward the heme alpha-meso-carbon by direct steric interactions with Gly-135 and Gly-139, and hydrogen bonds occur between the bound O(2) and the amide nitrogen of Gly-139 and a distal pocket water molecule, which is a part of an extended hydrogen bonding network that provides the solvent protons required for oxygen activation. In addition, the O-O bond is orthogonal to the plane of the proximal imidazole side chain, which facilitates hydroxylation of the porphyrin alpha-meso-carbon by preventing premature O-O bond cleavage.  相似文献   

8.
BjFixL from Bradyrhizobium japonicum is a heme-based oxygen sensor implicated in the signaling cascade that enables the bacterium to adapt to fluctuating oxygen levels. Signal transduction is initiated by the binding of O(2) to the heme domain of BjFixL, resulting in protein conformational changes that are transmitted to a histidine kinase domain. We report structural changes of the heme and its binding pocket in the Fe(II) deoxy and Fe(III) met states of the wild-type BjFixLH oxygen sensor domain and four mutants of the highly conserved residue arginine 220. UV-visible, electron paramagnetic resonance, and resonance Raman spectroscopies all showed that the heme iron of the R220H mutant is unexpectedly six-coordinated at physiological pH in the Fe(III) state but undergoes pH- and redox-dependent coordination changes. This behavior is unprecedented for FixL proteins, but is reminiscent of another oxygen sensor from E. coli, EcDos. All mutants in their deoxy states are five-coordinated Fe(II), although we report rupture of the residue 220-propionate 7 interaction and structural modifications of the heme conformation as well as propionate geometry and flexibility. In this work, we conclude that part of the structural reorganization usually attributed to O(2) binding in the wild-type protein is in fact due to rupture of the Arg220-P7 interaction. Moreover, we correlate the structural modifications of the deoxy Fe(II) states with k(on) values and conclude that the Arg220-P7 interaction is responsible for the lower O(2) and CO k(on) values reported for the wild-type protein.  相似文献   

9.
The catalytic activity of heme-regulated phosphodiesterase from Escherichia coli (Ec DOS) on cyclic di-GMP is markedly enhanced upon binding of gas molecules, such as O2 and CO, to the heme iron complex in the sensor domain. Arg97 interacts directly with O2 bound to Fe(II) heme in the crystal structure of the isolated heme-bound sensor domain with the PAS structure (Ec DOS-PAS) and may thus be critical in ligand recognition. To establish the specific role of Arg97, we generated Arg97Ala, Arg97Glu, and Arg97Ile mutant Ec DOS-PAS proteins and examined binding to O2, CO, and cyanide, as well as redox potentials. The autoxidation rates of the Arg97Ala and Arg97Glu mutant proteins were up to 2000-fold higher, while the O2 dissociation rate constant for dissociation from the Fe(II)-O2 heme complex of the Arg97Ile mutant was 100-fold higher than that of the wild-type protein. In contrast, the redox potential values of the mutant proteins were only slightly different from that of the wild type (within 10 mV). Accordingly, we propose that Arg97 plays critical roles in recognition of the O2 molecule and redox switching by stabilizing the Fe(II)-O2 complex, thereby anchoring O2 to the heme iron and lowering the autoxidation rate to prevent formation of Fe(III) hemin species not regulated by gas molecules. Arg97 mutations significantly influenced interactions with the internal ligand Met95, during CO binding to the Fe(II) complex. Moreover, the binding behavior of cyanide to the Fe(III) complexes of the Arg mutant proteins was similar to that of O2, which is evident from the Kd values, suggestive of electrostatic interactions between cyanide and Arg97.  相似文献   

10.
We investigated structural and functional properties of bovine cytochrome P450 steroid 21-hydroxylase (P450c21), which catalyzes hydroxylation at C-21 of progesterone and 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone. The uncoupled H(2)O(2) formation was higher in the hydroxylation of progesterone (26% of NADPH consumed) than that of 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone (15% of NADPH consumed), indicating that 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone can better facilitate the O-O bond scission. In relation to this, it is noted that the O-O stretching mode (nu(O-O)) of the oxygen complex of P450c21 was sensitive to the substrate; the progesterone- or 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone-bound enzyme gave single (at 1137 cm(-1)) or split nu(O-O) bands (at 1124 and 1138 cm(-1)), respectively, demonstrating the presence of two forms for the latter. In contrast to nu(O-O), no corresponding difference was observed for the Fe-O(2) stretching mode between two different substrate-bound forms. The Fe-S(Cys) stretching mode in the ferric state was also identical (349 cm(-1)) for each substrate-bound form, suggesting that modulation through the axial thiolate by the substrate is unlikely. Therefore, it is deduced that the hydroxyl group at C-17 of 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone forms a hydrogen bond with the terminal oxygen atom of the FeOO complex in one form, yielding a lower nu(O-O) frequency with higher reactivity for O-O cleavage, whereas the other form in which the substrate does not provide a hydrogen bond to the oxygen ligand is essentially the same between the two kinds of substrates. In the hydrogen-bonded species, the substrate changes the geometry of the FeOO moiety, thereby performing the hydroxylation reaction more effectively in 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone than in progesterone.  相似文献   

11.
Heme reduction of ferric lactoperoxidase (LPO) into its ferrous form initially leads to the accumulation of the unstable form of LPO-Fe(II), which spontaneously converts to a more stable species, the two of which can be identified by Soret peaks at 440 and 434 nm, respectively. Our data demonstrate that both LPO-Fe(II) species are capable of binding O(2) at a similar rate to generate the ferrous-dioxy complex. Its formation with respect to O(2) was first order and monophasic and with rate constants of k(on) = 3.8 x 10(4) m(-1) s(-1) and k(off) = 11.2 s(-1). The dissociation rate constant for the formation of LPO-Fe(II)-O(2) is relatively high, in contrast to hemoprotein model compounds. This high dissociation rate can be attributed to a combination of effects that include the positive trans effect of the proximal ligand, the heme pocket environment, and the geometry of the Fe-O(2) linkage. Our results have also shown that the decay of the LPO-Fe(II)-O(2) complex occurs by two sequential O(2)-independent steps. The first step involves formation of a short-lived intermediate that can be characterized by its Soret absorption peak at 416 nm and may be attributed to the weakening of the Fe(II)-O(2) linkage with a rate constant of 0.5 s(-1). The second step is spontaneous conversion of this intermediate to generate the native enzyme and presumably superoxide as end products with a rate constant of 0.03 s(-1). A comprehensive kinetic model that links LPO-Fe(II)-O(2) complex formation to the LPO catalase-like activity, combined with the classic catalytic cycle, is presented here.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Little is known about the intermediates formed during catalysis by nitric-oxide synthase (NOS). We report here the characterization by resonance Raman spectroscopy of the oxygenated complex of the NOS from Staphylococcus aureus (saNOS) as well as the kinetics of formation and decay of the complex. An oxygenated complex transiently formed after mixing reduced saNOS with oxygen and decayed to the ferric enzyme with kinetics that were dependent on the substrate L-arginine and the cofactor H(4)B. The oxygenated complex displayed a Soret absorption band centered at 430 nm. Resonance Raman spectroscopy revealed that it can be described as a ferric superoxide form (Fe(III)O(2)(-)) with a single nu(O-O) mode at 1135 cm(-1). In the presence of L-arginine, an additional nu(O-O) mode at 1123 cm(-1) was observed, indicating an increased pi back-bonding electron donation to the bound oxygen induced by the substrate. With saNOS, this is the first time that the nu(Fe-O) mode of a NOS has been observed. The low frequency of this mode, at 517 cm(-1), points to an oxygenated complex that differs from that of P450(cam). The electronic structure of the oxygenated complex and the effect of L-arginine are discussed in relation to the kinetic properties of saNOS and other NOS.  相似文献   

14.
The heme-PAS is a specialized domain with which a broad class of signal-transducing heme proteins detect physiological heme ligands. Such domains exhibit a wide range of ligand binding parameters, yet they are all expected to feature an alpha-beta heme binding fold and a predominantly hydrophobic heme distal pocket without a distal histidine. We have compared, for the first time, the resonance Raman spectra of several heme-PASs: the heme-binding domains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum FixL, Escherichia coli Dos, Acetobacter xylinum PDEA1, and Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Dos. In all cases, the nu(Fe)-(CO) and nu(C-O) values of the carbonmonoxy forms were consistent with coordination of the heme iron to histidine on the proximal side and binding of the CO without electrostatic interaction with the heme distal pocket. EcDos was unusual in having predominantly hexacoordinate heme iron in the deoxy and met forms. Despite an evident lack of CO interaction with the EcDos heme pocket, relatively low Fe-O(2) (562 cm(-1)) and N-O (1576 cm(-1)) stretching frequencies indicated that strong polar interactions with that heme distal pocket are possible for highly bent ligands such as O(2) or NO. None of the newly studied NO adducts exhibited evidence of the Fe-His rupture and pentacoordination previously noted for Sinorhizobium meliloti FixL. A low Fe-His stretching frequency, formerly interpreted as a strained Fe-His bond, and the slow association of O(2) with S. meliloti FixL failed to correlate with the newly studied proteins having low association rate or low equilibrium association constants for binding of O(2). We conclude that although heme-PASs share some features, they represent distinct signal transduction mechanisms.  相似文献   

15.
High resolution crystal structures of myoglobin in the pH range 5.2-8.7 have been used as models for the peroxide-derived compound II intermediates in heme peroxidases and oxygenases. The observed Fe-O bond length (1.86-1.90 A) is consistent with that of a single bond. The compound II state of myoglobin in crystals was controlled by single-crystal microspectrophotometry before and after synchrotron data collection. We observe some radiation-induced changes in both compound II (resulting in intermediate H) and in the resting ferric state of myoglobin. These radiation-induced states are quite unstable, and compound II and ferric myoglobin are immediately regenerated through a short heating above the glass transition temperature (<1 s) of the crystals. It is unclear how this influences our compound II structures compared with the unaffected compound II, but some crystallographic data suggest that the influence on the Fe-O bond distance is minimal. Based on our crystallographic and spectroscopic data we suggest that for myoglobin the compound II intermediate consists of an Fe(IV)-O species with a single bond. The presence of Fe(IV) is indicated by a small isomer shift of delta = 0.07 mm/s from M?ssbauer spectroscopy. Earlier quantum refinements (crystallographic refinement where the molecular-mechanics potential is replaced by a quantum chemical calculation) and density functional theory calculations suggest that this intermediate H species is protonated.  相似文献   

16.
Roach MP  Ozaki S  Watanabe Y 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1446-1454
A general inability to elucidate extensive variations in the electronic characteristics of proximal heme iron ligands in heme proteins has hampered efforts to obtain a clear understanding of the role of the proximal heme iron ligand in the activation of oxygen and peroxide. The disadvantage of the frequently applied site-directed mutagenesis technique is that it is limited by the range of natural ligands available within the genetic code. The myoglobin cavity mutant H93G [Barrick, D. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 6546-6554] has its proximal histidine ligand replaced with glycine, a mutation which leaves an open cavity capable of accommodating a variety of unnatural potential proximal ligands. We have carried out investigations of the effect of changing the electron donor characteristics of a variety of substituted imidazole proximal ligands on the rate of formation of myoglobin compound II and identified a correlation between the substituted imidazole N-3 pK(a) (which provides a measure of the electron donor ability of N-3) and the apparent rate of formation of compound II. A similar rate dependence correlation is not observed upon binding of azide. This finding indicates that O-O bond cleavage and not the preceding peroxide binding step is being influenced by the electron donor characteristics of the substituted imidazole ligands. The proximal ligand effects are clearly visible, but their overall magnitude is quite low (1.7-fold increase in the O-O bond cleavage rate per pK(a) unit). This appears to provide support for recent commentaries which concluded that the partial ionization of the proximal histidine ligand in typical heme peroxidases may not be enough of an influence to provide a mechanistically critical push effect [Poulos, T. L. (1996) JBIC, J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 1, 356-359]. Further attempts were made to define the mechanism of the influence of N-3 pK(a) on O-O bond cleavage by using peracetic acid and cumene hydroperoxide as mechanistic probes. The observation of heme destruction in these reactions indicates that displacement of the proximal imidazole ligands by peracetic acid or cumene hydroperoxide has occurred. A combination mutation (H64D/H93G) was prepared with the objective of observing compound I of H64D/H93G with substituted imidazoles as proximal ligands upon reaction with H(2)O(2). This double mutant was found to simultaneously bind imidazole to both axial positions, an arrangement which prevents a reaction with H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

17.
An acidic surface variant (ASV) of the "truncated" hemoglobin from Thermobifida fusca was designed with the aim of creating a versatile globin scaffold endowed with thermostability and a high level of recombinant expression in its soluble form while keeping the active site unmodified. This engineered protein was obtained by mutating the surface-exposed residues Phe107 and Arg91 to Glu. Molecular dynamics simulations showed that the mutated residues remain solvent-exposed, not affecting the overall protein structure. Thus, the ASV was used in a combinatorial mutagenesis of the distal heme pocket residues in which one, two, or three of the conserved polar residues [TyrB10(54), TyrCD1(67), and TrpG8(119)] were substituted with Phe. Mutants were characterized by infrared and resonance Raman spectroscopy and compared with the wild-type protein. Similar Fe-proximal His stretching frequencies suggest that none of the mutations alters the proximal side of the heme cavity. Two conformers were observed in the spectra of the CO complexes of both wild-type and ASV protein: form 1 with ν(FeC) and ν(CO) at 509 and 1938 cm(-1) and form 2 with ν(FeC) and ν(CO) at 518 and 1920 cm(-1), respectively. Molecular dynamics simulations were performed for the wild-type and ASV forms, as well as for the TyrB10 mutant. The spectroscopic and computational results demonstrate that CO interacts with TrpG8 in form 1 and interacts with both TrpG8 and TyrCD1 in form 2. TyrB10 does not directly interact with the bound CO.  相似文献   

18.
Campylobacter jejuni contains two hemoglobins, Cgb and Ctb. Cgb has been suggested to perform an NO detoxification reaction to protect the bacterium against NO attack. On the other hand, the physiological function of Ctb, a class III truncated hemoglobin, remains unclear. By using CO as a structural probe, resonance Raman data show that the distal heme pocket of Ctb exhibits a positive electrostatic potential. In addition, two ligand-related vibrational modes, nu(Fe-O(2)) and nu(O-O), were identified in the oxy derivative, with frequencies at 542 and 1132 cm(-1), respectively, suggesting the presence of an intertwined H-bonding network surrounding the heme-bound ligand, which accounts for its unusually high oxygen affinity (222 microm(-1)). Mutagenesis studies of various distal mutants suggest that the heme-bound dioxygen is stabilized by H-bonds donated from the Tyr(B10) and Trp(G8) residues, which are highly conserved in the class III truncated hemoglobins; furthermore, an additional H-bond donated from the His(E7) to the Tyr(B10) further regulates these H-bonding interactions by restricting the conformational freedom of the phenolic side chain of the Tyr(B10). Taken together, the data suggest that it is the intricate balance of the H-bonding interactions that determines the unique ligand binding properties of Ctb. The extremely high oxygen affinity of Ctb makes it unlikely to function as an oxygen transporter; on the other hand, the distal heme environment of Ctb is surprisingly similar to that of cytochrome c peroxidase, suggesting a role of Ctb in performing a peroxidase or P450-type of oxygen chemistry.  相似文献   

19.
We examine the issue of ferryl protonation in heme proteins. An analysis of the results obtained from X-ray crystallography, resonance Raman spectroscopy, and extended X-ray absorption spectroscopy (EXAFS) is presented. Fe-O bond distances obtained from all three techniques are compared using Badger's rule. The long Fe-O bond lengths found in the ferryl crystal structures of myoglobin, cytochrome c peroxidase, horseradish peroxidase, and catalase deviate substantially from the values predict by Badger's rule, while the oxo-like distances obtained from EXAFS measurements are in good agreement with the empirical formula. Density functional calculations, which suggest that M?ssbauer spectroscopy can be used to determine ferryl protonation states, are presented. Our calculations indicate that the quadrupole splitting (DeltaE(Q)) changes significantly upon ferryl protonation. New resonance Raman data for horse-heart myoglobin compound II (Mb-II, pH 4.5) are also presented. An Fe-O stretching frequency of 790cm(-1) (shifting to 754cm(-1) with (18)O substitution) was obtained. This frequency provides a Badger distance of r(Fe-O)=1.66A. This distance is in agreement with the 1.69A Fe-O bond distance obtained from EXAFS measurements but is significantly shorter than the 1.93A bond found in the crystal structure of Mb-II (pH 5.2). In light of the available evidence, we conclude that the ferryl forms of myoglobin (pKa4), horseradish peroxidase (pKa4), cytochrome c peroxidase (pKa4), and catalase (pKa7) are not basic. They are authentic Fe(IV)oxos with Fe-O bonds on the order of 1.65A.  相似文献   

20.
The (1)H NMR resonances of the heme substituents of the low-spin Fe(III) form of nitrophorin 2, as its complexes with N-methylimidazole (NP2-NMeIm) and imidazole (NP2-ImH), have been assigned by a combination of (1)H homonuclear two-dimensional NMR techniques and (1)H-(13)C HMQC. Complete assignment of the proton and partial assignment of the (13)C resonances of the heme of these complexes has been achieved. Due to favorable rates of ligand exchange, it was also possible to assign part of the (1)H resonances of the high-spin heme via saturation transfer between high- and low-spin protein forms in a partially liganded NP2-NMeIm sample; additional resonances (vinyl and propionate) were assigned by NOESY techniques. The order of heme methyl resonances in the high-spin form of the protein over the temperature range of 10-37 degrees C is 8 = 5 > 1 > 3; the NMeIm complex has 5 > 1 > 3 > 8 as the order of heme methyl resonances at <30 degrees C, while above that temperature, the order is 5 > 3 > 1 > 8, due to crossover of the closely spaced 3- and 1-methyl resonances of the low-spin complex at higher temperatures. This crossover defines the nodal plane of the heme orbital used for spin delocalization as being oriented 162 +/- 2 degrees clockwise from the heme N(II)-Fe-N(IV) axis for the heme in the B orientation. For the NP2-ImH complex, the order of heme methyl resonances is 3 > 5 > 1 > 8, which defines the orientation of the nodal plane of the heme orbital used for spin delocalization as being oriented approximately 150-155 degrees clockwise from the heme N(II)-Fe-N(IV) axis. In both low-spin complexes, the results are most consistent with the exogenous planar ligand controlling the orientation of the nodal plane of the heme orbital. In the high-spin form of NP2, the proximal histidine plane is shown to be oriented 135 degrees clockwise from the heme N(II)-Fe-N(IV) axis, again for the B heme orientation. A correlation between the order of heme methyl resonances in the high-spin form of NP2 and several other ferriheme proteins and an apparent 90 degrees shift in the nodal plane of the orbital involved in spin delocalization from that expected on the basis of the orientation of the axial histidine imidazole nodal plane have been explained in terms of bonding interactions between Fe(III), the axial histidine imidazole nitrogen, and the porphyrin pi orbitals of the high-spin protein.  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