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1.
A set of variant human hemoglobins, each with an Ala or Gly substitution at a single residue, has been prepared, and the kinetics of their reactions with carbon monoxide have been measured. This reaction is rate-limited by the binding of the first CO to the deoxygenated T state of the protein. The magnitudes of the effects of the mutations on CO combination vary widely, and, with the exception of beta Y145, the residues with the most significant effects on these kinetics are found in the hinge region of the alpha 1 beta 2 interface. Mixed-metal hybrids, with zinc protoporphyrin IX in place of heme on both alpha or both beta subunits, were prepared for beta W37E, beta W37A, alpha Y140G, and alpha Y140A, hinge region variants causing large kinetic changes, and for beta Y145G. Such hybrids permit measurements of the kinetics of CO binding to only the heme-containing alpha or beta subunits within the unliganded hemoglobin tetramer. Mutations at beta 37 and alpha 140 have global effects on the T state, increasing the rates of CO binding to both types of subunits. Mutation of beta Y145 has a large effect on the beta subunits in the deoxygenated T state, but very little effect on the alpha subunits. Oxygen equilibria measurements on the crystalline T state of beta W37E also indicate large affinity increases in both subunits of this variant. The overall oxygen equilibria of the variant hemoglobins in solution are sensitive to numerous variables besides the properties of the deoxygenated T state. In contrast to CO combination kinetics, the residues whose alterations cause the largest changes in overall oxygen equilibria in solution are scattered seemingly randomly within the alpha 1 beta 2 interface.  相似文献   

2.
Nagatomo S  Nagai M  Shibayama N  Kitagawa T 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):10010-10020
The alpha1-beta2 subunit contacts in the half-ligated hemoglobin A (Hb A) have been explored with ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy using the Ni-Fe hybrid Hb under various solution conditions. Our previous studies demonstrated that Trpbeta37, Tyralpha42, and Tyralpha140 are mainly responsible for UVRR spectral differences between the complete T (deoxyHb A) and R (COHb A) structures [Nagai, M., Wajcman, H., Lahary, A., Nakatsukasa, T., Nagatomo, S., and Kitagawa, T. (1999) Biochemistry, 38, 1243-1251]. On the basis of it, the UVRR spectra observed for the half-ligated alpha(Ni)beta(CO) and alpha(CO)beta(Ni) at pH 6.7 in the presence of IHP indicated the adoption of the complete T structure similar to alpha(Ni)beta(deoxy) and alpha(deoxy)beta(Ni). The extent of the quaternary structural changes upon ligand binding depends on pH and IHP, but their characters are qualitatively the same. For alpha(Ni)beta(Fe), it is not until pH 8.7 in the absence of IHP that the Tyr bands are changed by ligand binding. The change of Tyr residues is induced by binding of CO, but not of NO, to the alpha heme, while it was similarly induced by binding of CO and NO to the beta heme. The Trp bands are changed toward R-like similarly for alpha(Ni)beta(CO) and alpha(CO)beta(Ni), indicating that the structural changes of Trp residues are scarcely different between CO binding to either the alpha or beta heme. The ligand induced quaternary structural changes of Tyr and Trp residues did not take place in a concerted way and were different between alpha(Ni)beta(CO) and alpha(CO)beta(Ni). These observations directly indicate that the phenomenon occurring at the alpha1-beta2 interface is different between the ligand binding to the alpha and beta hemes and is greatly influenced by IHP. A plausible mechanism of the intersubunit communication upon binding of a ligand to the alpha or beta subunit to the other subunit and its difference between NO and CO as a ligand are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Symmetrical FeZn hybrids of human HbA have been used to measure K(1)(alpha) and K(1)(beta), the dissociation constants for the binding of a single molecule of oxygen to unliganded HbA at an alpha subunit and at a beta subunit, respectively. The kinetic constants, l(1)'(alpha) and l(1)'(beta), for the combination of the first CO molecule to unliganded HbA at an alpha or a beta subunit, respectively, were also measured. Measurements were carried out between pH 6 and pH 8 in the presence and absence of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). Both equilibrium constants exhibit a significant Bohr effect in the absence of IHP. The addition of IHP to a concentration of 0.1 mM increases both dissociation constants in a pH-dependent manner with the result that both Bohr effects are greatly reduced. These results require a negative thermodynamic linkage between the binding of a single oxygen at either an alpha or a beta subunit and the binding of IHP to the T quaternary structure of HbA. Although the beta hemes are relatively near the IHP binding site, a linkage between that site and the alpha hemes, such that the binding of a single oxygen molecule to the heme of one alpha subunit reduces the affinity of the T state for IHP, requires communication across the molecule. l(1)'(alpha) exhibits a very slight pH dependence, with a maximum variation of 20%, while l(1)'(beta) varies with pH three times as much. IHP has no effect on the pH dependence of either rate constant but reduces l(1)'(alpha) marginally, 20%, and l(1)'(beta) by 2-fold at all pH values.  相似文献   

4.
The distal side of the heme pocket, known to regulate ligand affinity, is shown to be directly involved in subunit interactions. Valency hybrids with oxygen or carbon monoxide bound to the reduced chain are used to model R-state hemoglobin with different distal perturbations. Electron paramagnetic resonance of the oxidized chains shows that the carbon monoxide perturbation is transmitted between subunits to the distal histidine and the oxidized iron center. A comparison of hybrids with only one type of chain oxidized and hybrids with a single alpha beta dimer oxidized is consistent with this perturbation being transmitted across the alpha 1 beta 1 interface. This represents a new mode of subunit interactions in hemoglobin.  相似文献   

5.
We have applied single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods to analyze the structure of [alpha(FeII-CO)beta(MnII)]2, a mixed-metal hybrid hemoglobin that crystallizes in the deoxyhemoglobin quaternary structure (the T-state) even though it is half liganded. This study, carried out at a resolution of 3.0 A, shows that (1) the Mn(II)-substituted beta subunits are structurally isomorphous with normal deoxy beta subunits, and (2) CO binding to the alpha subunits induces small, localized changes in the T-state that lack the main directional component of the corresponding larger structural changes in subunit tertiary structure that accompany complete ligand binding to all four subunits and the deoxy to oxy quaternary structure change. Specifically, in the T-state, CO binding to the alpha heme group draws the iron atom toward the heme plane, and this in turn pulls the last turn of the F helix (residues 85 through 89) closer to the heme group. The direction of these small movements is almost perpendicular to the axis of the F helix. In contrast, when the structures of fully liganded and deoxyhemoglobin are compared, extensive structural changes occur throughout the F helix and FG corner, and the main component of the atomic movements in the F helix (in addition to the smaller component toward the heme) is in a direction parallel to the heme plane and toward the alpha 1 beta 2 interface. These findings are discussed in terms of the current stereochemical theories of co-operative ligand binding and the Bohr effect.  相似文献   

6.
Song XJ  Simplaceanu V  Ho NT  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2008,47(17):4907-4915
The present study reports distinct dynamic consequences for the T- and R-states of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) due to the binding of a heterotropic allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). A nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique based on modified transverse relaxation optimized spectroscopy (TROSY) has been used to investigate the effect of conformational exchange of Hb A in both deoxy and CO forms, in the absence and presence of IHP, at 14.1 and 21.1 T, and at 37 degrees C. Our results show that the majority of the polypeptide backbone amino acid residues of deoxy- and carbonmonoxy-forms of Hb A in the absence of IHP is not mobile on the micros-ms time scale, with the exception of several amino acid residues, that is, beta109Val and beta132Lys in deoxy-Hb A, and alpha40Lys in HbCO A. The mobility of alpha40Lys in HbCO A can be explained by the crystallographic data showing that the H-bond between alpha40Lys and beta146His in deoxy-Hb A is absent in HbCO A. However, the conformational exchange of beta109Val, which is located in the intradimer (alpha 1beta 1 or alpha 2beta 2) interface, is not consistent with the crystallographic observations that show rigid packing at this site. IHP binding appears to rigidify alpha40Lys in HbCO A, but does not significantly affect the flexibility of beta109Val in deoxy-Hb A. In the presence of IHP, several amino acid residues, especially those at the interdimer (alpha 1beta 2 or alpha 2beta 1) interface of HbCO A, exhibit significant conformational exchange. The affected residues include the proximal beta92His in the beta-heme pocket, as well as some other residues located in the flexible joint (betaC helix-alphaFG corner) and switch (alphaC helix-betaFG corner) regions that play an important role in the dimer-dimer rotation of Hb during the oxygenation process. These findings suggest that, upon IHP binding, HbCO A undergoes a conformational fluctuation near the R-state but biased toward the T-state, apparently along the trajectory of its allosteric transition, accompanied by structural fluctuations in the heme pocket of the beta-chain. In contrast, no significant perturbation of the dynamic features on the ms-micros time scale has been observed upon IHP binding to deoxy-Hb A. We propose that the allosteric effector-induced quaternary structural fluctuation may contribute to the reduced ligand affinity of ligated hemoglobin. Conformational exchange mapping of the beta-chain of HbCO A observed at 21.1 T shows significantly increased scatter in the chemical exchange contribution to the transverse relaxation rate ( R ex) values, relative to those at lower fields, due to the enhanced effect of the local chemical shift anisotropy (CSA) fluctuation. A spring-on-scissors model is proposed to interpret the dynamic phenomena induced by the heterotropic effector, IHP.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of geminate recombination for the diliganded species alpha 2CO beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2CO of human hemoglobin were studied using flash photolysis. The unstable diliganded species were generated just before photolysis by chemical reduction in a continuous flow reactor from the more stable valency hybrids alpha 2CO beta 2+ and alpha 2+ beta 2CO, which could be prepared by high pressure liquid chromatography. Before the flash photolysis studies, the hybrids had been characterized by double-mixing stopped-flow kinetics experiments. At pH 6.0 in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) both of the diliganded species show second order kinetics for overall addition of a third CO that is clearly characteristic of the T state (l' = 1-2 x 10(5) M-1 s-1), whereas at higher pH and in the absence of IHP they show combination rates characteristic of an R state. The kinetics of geminate recombination following photolysis of a bound CO, however, showed little dependence on pH and IHP concentration. This surprising observation is explained on the basis that the kinetics of geminate recombination of CO primarily depends on the tertiary structure of the ligand binding site, which apparently does not differ much between the R state and the liganded T state formed on adding IHP in this system. Since this explanation requires distinguishing different tertiary structures within a particular quaternary structure, it amounts to a contradiction to the two-state allosteric model.  相似文献   

8.
We undertook this project to clarify whether hemoglobin (Hb) dimers have a high affinity for oxygen and cooperativity. For this, we prepared stable Hb dimers by introducing the mutation Trp-->Glu at beta37 using our Escherichia coli expression system at the alpha1beta2 interface of Hb, and analyzed their molecular properties. The mutant hybrid Hbs with a single oxygen binding site were prepared by substituting Mg(II) protoporphyrin for ferrous heme in either the alpha or beta subunit, and the oxygen binding properties of the free dimers were investigated. Molecular weight determination of both the deoxy and CO forms showed all these molecules to be dimers in the absence of IHP at different protein concentrations. Oxygen equilibrium measurements showed high affinity and non-cooperative oxygen binding for all mutant Hb and hybrid Hb dimers. However, EPR results on the [alpha(N)(Fe-NO)beta(M)(Mg)] hybrid showed some alpha1beta1 interactions. These results provide some clues as to the properties of Hb dimers, which have not been studied extensively owing to practical difficulties in their preparation.  相似文献   

9.
The bimolecular and geminate CO recombination kinetics have been measured for hemoglobin (Hb) with over 90% of the ligand binding sites occupied by NO. Since Hb(NO)4 with inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) at pH below 7 is thought to take on the low affinity (deoxy) conformation, the goal of the experiments was to determine whether the species IHPHb-(NO)3(CO) also exists in this quaternary structure, which would allow ligand binding studies to tetramers in the deoxy conformation. For samples at pH 6.6 in the presence of IHP, the bimolecular kinetics show only a slow phase with rate 7 x 10(4) M-1 s-1, characteristic of CO binding to deoxy Hb, indicating that the triply NO tetramers are in the deoxy conformation. Unlike Hb(CO)4, the fraction recombination occurring during the geminate phase is low (< 1%) in aqueous solutions, suggesting that the IHPHb(NO)3(CO) hybrid is also essentially in the deoxy conformation. By mixing stock solutions of HbCO and HbNO, the initial exchange of dimers produces asymmetric (alpha NO beta NO/alpha CO beta CO) hybrids. At low pH in the presence of IHP, this hybrid also displays a high bimolecular quantum yield and a large fraction of slow (deoxy-like) CO recombination; the slow bimolecular kinetics show components of equal amplitude with rates 7 and 20 x 10(4) M-1 s-1, probably reflecting the differences in the alpha and beta chains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Human alpha-nitrosyl beta-deoxy hemoglobin A, alpha(NO)beta(deoxy), is considered to have a T (tense) structure with the low O(2) affinity extreme and the Fe-histidine (His87) (Fe-His) bond of alpha heme cleaved. The Fe-His bonding of alpha heme and the intersubunit interactions at the alpha 1-beta 2 contact of alpha(NO)-Hbs have been examined under various conditions with EPR and UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectra excited at 235 nm, respectively. NOHb at pH 6.7 gave the UVRR spectrum of the R structure, but in the presence of inositol-hexakis-phosphate (IHP) for which the Fe-His bond of the alpha heme is broken, UVRR bands of Trp residues behaved half-T-like while Tyr bands remained R-like. The half-ligated nitrosylHb, alpha(NO)beta(deoxy), in the presence of IHP at pH 5.6, gave T-like UVRR spectra for both Tyr and Trp, but binding of CO to its beta heme (alpha(NO)beta(CO)) changed the UVRR spectrum to half-T-like. Binding of NO to its beta heme (NOHb) changed the UVRR spectrum to 70% T-type for Trp but almost R-type for Tyr. When the pH was raised to 8.2 in the presence of IHP, the UVRR spectrum of NOHb was the same as that of COHb. EPR spectra of these Hbs indicated that the Fe-His bond of alpha(NO) heme is partially cleaved. On the other hand, the UVRR spectra of alpha(NO)beta(deoxy) in the absence of IHP at pH 8.8 showed the T-like UVRR spectrum, but the EPR spectrum indicated that 40-50% of the Fe-His bond of alpha hemes was intact. Therefore, it became evident that there is a qualitative correlation between the cleavage of the Fe-His bond of alpha heme and T-like contact of Trp-beta 37. We note that the behaviors of Tyr and Trp residues at the alpha 1-beta 2 interface are not synchronous. It is likely that the behaviors of Tyr residues are controlled by the ligation of beta heme through His-beta 92(F8)-->Val-beta 98(FG5)-->Asp-beta 99(G1 )-->Tyr-alpha 42(C7) or Tyr-beta 145(HC2).  相似文献   

11.
12.
Association and dissociation rate constants for O2, CO, and methyl isocyanide binding to native and distal pocket mutants of R state human hemoglobin were measured using ligand displacement and partial photolysis techniques. Individual rate constants for the alpha and beta subunits were resolved by comparisons between the kinetic behavior of the native and mutant proteins. His-E7 was replaced with Gly and Gln in both alpha and beta subunits and with Phe in beta subunits alone. In separate experiments Val-E11 was replaced with Ala, Leu, and Ile in each globin chain. The parameters describing ligand binding to R state alpha subunits are sensitive to the size and polarity of the amino acids at positions E7 and E11. The distal histidine in this subunit inhibits the bimolecular rate of binding of both O2 and CO, sterically hinders bound CO and methyl isocyanide, and stabilizes bound O2 by hydrogen bonding. The Val-E11 side chain in alpha chains also appears to be part of the kinetic barrier to O2 and CO binding since substitution with Ala causes approximately 10-fold increases in the association rate constants for the binding of these diatomic ligands. However, substitution of Val-E11 by Ile produces only small decreases in the rates of ligand binding to alpha subunits. For R state beta subunits, the bimolecular rates of O2 and CO binding are intrinsically large, approximately 2-5-fold greater than those for alpha subunits, and with the exception of Val-E11----Ile mutation, little affected by substitutions at either the E7 or E11 positions. For the beta Val-E11----Ile mutant the association rate and equilibrium constants for all three ligands decreased 10-50-fold. All of these results agree with Shaanan's conclusions that the distal pocket in liganded beta subunits is more open whereas in alpha subunits bound ligands are more sterically hindered by adjacent distal residues (Shaanan, B. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 171, 31-59). In the case of O2 binding to alpha subunits, the unfavorable steric effects are compensated by the formation of a hydrogen bond between the nitrogen atom of His-E7 and bound dioxygen.  相似文献   

13.
NMR relaxation measurements of 15N spin-lattice relaxation rate (R(1)), spin-spin relaxation rate (R(2)), and heteronuclear nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) have been carried out at 11.7T and 14.1T as a function of temperature for the side-chains of the tryptophan residues of 15N-labeled and/or (2H,15N)-labeled recombinant human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) and three recombinant mutant hemoglobins, rHb Kempsey (betaD99N), rHb (alphaY42D/betaD99N), and rHb (alphaV96W), in the carbonmonoxy and the deoxy forms as well as in the presence and in the absence of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). There are three Trp residues (alpha14, beta15, and beta37) in Hb A for each alphabeta dimer. These Trp residues are located in important regions of the Hb molecule, i.e. alpha14Trp and beta15Trp are located in the alpha(1)beta(1) subunit interface and beta37Trp is located in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface. The relaxation experiments show that amino acid substitutions in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface can alter the dynamics of beta37Trp. The transverse relaxation rate (R(2)) for beta37Trp can serve as a marker for the dynamics of the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface. The relaxation parameters of deoxy-rHb Kemspey (betaD99N), which is a naturally occurring abnormal human hemoglobin with high oxygen affinity and very low cooperativity, are quite different from those of deoxy-Hb A, even in the presence of IHP. The relaxation parameters for rHb (alphaY42D/betaD99N), which is a compensatory mutant of rHb Kempsey, are more similar to those of Hb A. In addition, TROSY-CPMG experiments have been used to investigate conformational exchange in the Trp residues of Hb A and the three mutant rHbs. Experimental results indicate that the side-chain of beta37Trp is involved in a relatively slow conformational exchange on the micro- to millisecond time-scale under certain experimental conditions. The present results provide new dynamic insights into the structure-function relationship in hemoglobin.  相似文献   

14.
The properties of three HbA variants with different mutations at the beta102 position, betaN102Q, betaN102T, and betaN102A, have been examined. All three are inhibited in their ligand-linked transition from the low affinity T quaternary state to the high affinity Re quaternary state. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate, IHP, none of them exhibits cooperativity in the binding of oxygen. This is consistent with the destabilization of the Re state as a result of the disruption of the hydrogen bond that normally forms between the beta102 asparagine residue and the alpha94 aspartate residue in the Re state. However, these three substitutions also alter the properties of the T state of the hemoglobin tetramer. In the presence of IHP, the first two substitutions result in large increases in the ligand affinities of the beta-subunits within the T state structure. The betaN102A variant, however, greatly reduces the pH dependencies of the affinities of the alpha and beta subunits, K1(alpha) and K1(beta), respectively, for the binding of the first oxygen molecule in the absence of IHP. In the presence of IHP, the T state of this variant is strikingly similar to that of HbA under the same conditions. For both hemoglobins, K1(alpha) and K1(beta) exhibit only small Bohr effects. In the absence of IHP, the affinities of the alpha and beta subunits of HbA for the first oxygen are increased, and both exhibit greatly increased Bohr effects. However, in contrast to the behavior of HbA, the ligand-binding properties of the T state tetramer of the betaN102A variant are little affected by the addition or removal of IHP. It appears that along with its effect on the stability of the liganded Re state, this mutation has an effect on the T state that mimics the effect of adding IHP to HbA. It inhibits the set of conformational changes, which are coupled to the K1 Bohr effects and normally accompany the binding of the first ligand to the HbA tetramer in the absence of organic phosphates.  相似文献   

15.
J S Philo  U Dreyer    J W Lary 《Biophysical journal》1996,70(4):1949-1965
The kinetics of CO binding and changes in quaternary structure for symmetric valency hybrids of human hemoglobin have been extensively studied by laser photolysis techniques. Both alpha+beta and alpha beta+ hybrids were studied with five different ferric ligands, over a broad range of CO concentrations and photolysis levels. After full CO photolysis, the hybrid tetramers switch extensively and rapidly (< 200 microseconds) to the T quaternary structure. Both R --> T and T --> R transition rates for valency hybrid tetramers with 0 and 1 bound CO have been obtained, as well as the CO association rates for alpha and beta subunits in the R and T states. The results reveal submillisecond R reversible T interconversion, and, for the first time, the changes in quaternary rates and equilibria due to binding a single CO per tetramer have been resolved. The data also show significant alpha-beta differences in quaternary dynamics and equilibria. The allosteric constants do not vary with the spin states of the ferric subunits as predicted by the Perutz stereochemical model. For the alpha beta+CN hybrid the kinetics are heterogeneous and imply partial conversion to a T-like state with very low (seconds) R reversible T interconversion.  相似文献   

16.
We have developed a rapid and useful method for purification of valency hybrid hemoglobins (alpha 2+ beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2+: + denotes ferric heme) from a hemoglobin solution oxidized partially with ferricyanide by preparative high-performance liquid chromatography. This method does not involve the separation of hemoglobin subunits and the reconstitution of ferric and partner ferrous subunits. Using the valency hybrid hemoglobins thus prepared, the effect of the ferric spin state on the alpha 1 beta 2 subunit boundary structure was investigated by measuring the ultraviolet difference absorption spectra between the deoxy and the oxy valency hybrids associated with various ferric ligands (fluoride, aquo, azide and cyanide). All derivatives of both alpha 2+ beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2+ showed the difference spectra characteristic of R-T quaternary structural transition. However, the magnitude of the difference spectral peak observed near 288 nm was larger for high-spin derivatives than for low-spin ones. The magnitude of the peak for the valency hybrid hemoglobin was closely correlated with the difference in the free energy of oxygen binding between the R and T states. Since the R state of high-spin hybrids is considered to be identical to that of low-spin hybrids, we concluded from these results that the alpha 1 beta 2 subunit boundary structure plays an important role in regulating the oxygen affinity of deoxy T state.  相似文献   

17.
C Zentz  S el Antri  S Pin  R Cortes  A Massat  M Simon  B Alpert 《Biochemistry》1991,30(11):2804-2810
The effects of mixed solvents on the ligand binding site in hemoglobin have been investigated though three spectroscopic techniques. Two classes of organic solvents (amides and alcohols) known to increase or decrease the hemoglobin affinity have been chosen for this study. The analysis of the iron CO stretching band shows that the ligand binding sites of alpha CO and beta CO subunits inside the alpha 2 beta 2 hemoglobin tetramer exhibit multiple conformations. From the circular dichroism and X-ray absorption near-edge structure data, it appears that no core deformation or heme reorientation occur with the affinity changes. The iron-ligand average bond angle is the sole parameter that depends on the external solvent. Since cosolvents seem to affect the dynamics rather than the hindrance of the heme cavity, we suggest that the protein affinity could be associated with a hierarchy of subtle dynamic states.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of O2 and CO binding to R-state human hemoglobin A0 and human hemoglobin cross-linked between the alpha chains at Lys99 residues were examined using ligand displacement and partial photolysis techniques. Oxygen equilibrium curves were measured by Imai's continuous recording method (Imai, K. (1981) Methods Enzymol. 76, 438-449). The rate of the R to T transition was determined after full laser photolysis of the carbon monoxide derivative by measuring the resultant absorbance changes at an isosbestic point for ligand binding. Chemical cross-linking caused the R-state O2 affinity of alpha subunits to decrease 6-fold compared with unmodified hemoglobin. This inhibition of O2 binding was the result of both a decrease in the rate constant for ligand association and an increase in the rate constant for dissociation. The O2 affinity of R-state beta subunits was reduced 2-fold because of an increase in the O2 dissociation rate constant. These changes were attributed to proximal effects on the R-state hemes as the result of the covalent cross-link between alpha chain G helices. This proximal strain in cross-linked hemoglobin was also expressed as a 5-fold higher rate for the unliganded R to T allosteric transition. The fourth O2 equilibrium binding constant, K4, measured by kinetic techniques, could be used to analyze equilibrium curves for either native or cross-linked hemoglobin. The resultant fitted values of the Adair constants, a1, a2, and a3 were similar to those obtained when K4 was allowed to vary, and the fits were of equal quality. When K4 was fixed to the kinetically determined value, the remaining Adair constants, particularly a3, became better defined.  相似文献   

19.
The association kinetics of CO binding to site-directed mutants of human deoxyhemoglobin were measured by stopped-flow rapid mixing techniques at pH 7.0, 20 degrees C. Hemoglobin tetramers were constructed from one set of native subunits and one set of mutated partners containing His(E7) to Gly, Val(E11) to Ala, or Val(E11) to Ile substitutions. The reactivity of beta Cys93 with p-hydroxymercuribenzoate was measured to ensure that the mutant deoxyhemoglobins were capable of forming T-state quaternary conformations. Time courses for the complete binding of CO were measured by mixing the deoxygenated proteins with a 5-fold excess of ligand in the absence and presence of inositol hexaphosphate. Association rate constants for the individual alpha and beta subunits in the T-state conformation were assigned by measuring time courses for the reaction of a small, limiting amount of CO with a 20-fold excess of deoxyhemoglobin (i.e. Hb4 + CO----Hb4(CO)). The effects of the E7 and E11 mutations in T-state alpha subunits were qualitatively similar to those observed for the same subunit in the R-state (Mathews, A.J., Rohlfs, R.J., Olson, J.S., Tame, J., Renaud, J-P., and Nagai, K. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 16573-16583). The alpha His58(E7) to Gly and Val62(E11) to Ala substitutions caused 80- and 3-fold increases, respectively, in k'CO for T-state alpha subunits, and the alpha Val62(E11) to Ile mutation caused a 3-fold decrease. The beta His63(E7) to Gly and Val67(E11) to Ala substitutions produced 70- and 8-fold increases, respectively, in k'CO for T-state beta subunits whereas these same mutations caused little effect on the rate of CO binding to R-state beta subunits. The beta Val67(E11) to Ile mutation produced the same large effect, a 23-fold reduction in k'CO, in both quaternary conformations of beta subunits. These kinetic results can be interpreted qualitatively in terms of differences between the alpha and beta subunits in the deoxy and liganded crystal structures of human hemoglobin (Perutz, M.F. (1990) Annu. Rev. Physiol. 52, 1-25). Both the structural and functional data suggest that the distal portion of the beta heme pocket is tightly packed in deoxyhemoglobin whereas the CO binding site in R-state beta subunits is much more open. In contrast, the distal portion of the alpha heme pocket is restricted sterically in both quaternary states.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The time-resolved spectra of photoproducts from ligand photodissociation of oxyhemoglobin are measured in the Soret spectral region for times from 10 ns to 320 microseconds after laser photolysis. Four processes are detected at a heme concentration of 80 microM: a 38-ns geminate recombination, a 137-ns tertiary relaxation, and two bimolecular processes for rebinding of molecular oxygen. The pseudo-first-order rate constants for rebinding to the alpha and beta subunits of hemoglobin are 3.2 x 10(4) s-1 (31 microseconds lifetime) and 9.4 x 10(4) s-1 (11 microseconds lifetime), respectively. The significance of kinetic measurements made at different heme concentrations is discussed in terms of the equilibrium compositions of hemoglobin tetramer and dimer mixtures. The rebinding rate constants for alpha and beta chains are observed to be about two times slower in the dimer than in the tetramer, a finding that appears to support the observation of quaternary enhancement in equilibrium ligand binding by hemoglobin tetramers.  相似文献   

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