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1.
Leghemoglobin(IV), the derivative of leghemoglobin at the formal oxidation state IV, when cooled to liquid nitrogen temperature exhibits radically different spectra at acid and alkaline pH. The acid and alkaline forms are freely interconvertible. The optical spectrum of the acid form is closely similar to optical spectra of the red higher oxidation states of horseradish and cytochrome c peroxidases, showing that the configuration of the heme iron is the same throughout this family of compounds. That configuration is believed to be Fe(IV) in a porphyrin environment. The optical spectrum of the alkaline form of leghemoglobin(IV) recalls that of alkaline low spin ferric leghemoglobin. Near infrared spectra of leghemoglobin(IV), myoglobin(IV), and the higher oxidation states of the peroxidases are featureless to 1300 nm, suggesting a common structural feature. The acid form of leghemoglobin(IV), seen in fluid buffer as a transient species at pH 5 or less, is conveniently generated by cooling a solution of the more stable alkaline form in borate buffer to liquid nitrogen temperature. At this temperature borate buffers become acid.  相似文献   

2.
The circular dichroism spectra of leghemoglobin a from the root nodules of soybean have been compared with those for sperm whale myoglobin in the fat- and near-ultraviolet and the Soret and visible regions of the spectrum. Circular dichroism spectra in the far-ultraviolet show that the leghemoglobins all have a high alpha-helix content (soybean leghemoglobin a, 55%) regardless of the nature of bound ligands and oxidation or spin state of the heme iron. The known sequence homologies with mammalian hemoglobins may therefore be reflected in conformational homologies as suggested by the x-ray studies of Vainshtein et al. ((1975) Nature (London) 254, 163-164) on lupin leghemoglobin. Removal of the heme moiety decreases helicity by only 9% for leghemoglobins, compared with 23% for myoglobin. This, the much smaller heme contribution to the near-ultraviolet circular dichroism than in myoglobin, and the greater accessibility of the heme moiety to aqueous solvent (Nicola et al. (1974), Proc. Aust. Biochem. Soc. 7, 21) suggest that the association between heme and protein is much weaker in leghemoglobins than in myoglobin. The aromatic Soret and visible circular dichroism spectra for all derivatives of leghemoglobin are opposite in sense to those for myoglobin, showing that the patterns of protein side chain contacts with the heme are different in the two classes of heme proteins. There is strong evidence that one of the two tryptophans whose identity and structural role in myoglobin is known, is present also in plant leghemoglobins, hydrogen-bonded and in a similar nonpolar environment whether heme is present or not. The above findings help to explain the remarkably high oxygen affinity and some other ligand-binding properties of leghemoglobins which differ from those of myoglobin.  相似文献   

3.
A surprisingly stable complex of the photolyzed product of azidochromium(III)protoporphyrin-IX was prepared and examined by light absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and resonance Raman spectroscopies. The characteristic EPR spectrum for this complex was consistent with a nitridochromium(V)-porphyrin complex which was two oxidation equivalents above the resting Cr(III) complex. The Cr(V)-N stretching mode was observed at 1010 cm-1 by resonance Raman spectroscopy. A simple diatomic harmonic oscillation model gave a force constant of 6.7 mdyn/A for the Cr(V)-N bond, in the region characteristic for the metal-nitrogen triple bond. Nitridochromium(V) protoporphyrin-IX reconstituted myoglobin and cytochrome c peroxidase were prepared for the first time. The nitridochromium(V)-porphyrins in these apo-proteins were unstable in contrast with the protein-free chromium(V)porphyrin. Upon irradiation of the azide complexes of the chromium(III) protoporphyrin-IX reconstituted myoglobin and cytochrome c peroxidase with ultraviolet light aerobically at room temperature, the characteristic optical and EPR spectra for nitridochromium(V) derivatives were observed. The optical spectra of these photo-induced products were different from those of the nitridochromium(V) protoporphyrin-IX reconstituted hemoproteins. The electrochemical structures of the unusual metalloporphyrin seemed to be modulated by the heme surrounding amino acid residues.  相似文献   

4.
The reaction product of myoglobin and H2O2 exists in two different forms according to the external pH. Varied-temperature magnetic-circular dichroism (m.c.d.) spectroscopy demonstrates that both contain the oxyferryl ion Fe(IV) = O. Alkaline myoglobin peroxide has often been used as a model for oxidized intermediates in the catalytic cycles of haem-containing peroxidases, but absorption and m.c.d. spectra show that the acid form is much more closely related to species such as horeradish peroxidase Compound II. The differences are tentatively ascribed to ionization of the proximal histidine ligand in alkaline myoglobin peroxide. It is also shown that the m.c.d. method allows an estimate of the zero-field splitting parameter of both forms, values of D = 28.0 +/- 3 cm-1 and 35.0 +/- 5 cm-1 being obtained for the alkaline and acid forms respectively.  相似文献   

5.
In the spectral region 350-800 nm at 4.2 K we measured magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the pentacoordinated complex of protcheme with 2-methylimidazole, deoxyleghemoglobin, neutral and alkaline forms of reduced horseradish peroxidase in the equilibrium states, as well as in non-equilibrium states produced by low-temperature photolysis of their carbon monoxide derivatives. Earlier the corresponding results have been obtained for myoglobin, hemoglobin and cytochromes P-450 and P-420. The energies of Fe-N (proximal His) and Fe-N(pyrroles) bonds and their changes upon ligand binding in heme proteins and enzymes were compared with those in the model heme complex thus providing conformational contribution into stereochemistry of the active site. The examples of weak and strong conformational "pressure" on stereochemistry were analysed and observed. If conformational energy contribution into stereochemistry prevails the electronic one the heme stereochemistry remains unchanged on ligand binding as it was observed for leghemoglobin and alkaline horseradish peroxidase. The change of bond energies in myoglobin and hemoglobin on ligand binding are comparable with those in protein free pentacoordinated protoheme, giving an example of weak conformational contribution to heme stereochemistry. The role of protein conformation energy in the modulation of ligand binding properties of heme in leghemoglobin relative to those in myoglobins is discussed. The most striking result were obtained in the study of reduced horseradish peroxidase in the pH region of 6.0-10.2. It was found that such different perturbations as ligand binding and heme-linked ionization of the distal amino acid residue induce identical changes in heme stereochemistry. Neither heme-linked ionization in the carbon monoxide complex nor the geometry of Fe-Co bond affect the heme local structure of photoproducts. These and other findings suggest a very low conformation mobility of horseradish peroxidase whose protein constraints appear to allow only two preferable geometries of specific amino acid residues that form the heme pocket. The role of the two tertiary structure constraints on the heme in the mechanism of horseradish peroxidase function is discussed. It is supposed that one conformation produces a heme environment suitable for two-electron oxidation of the native enzyme to compound I by hydrogen peroxide while another conformation changes the heme stereochemistry in the direction favourable for back reduction of compound I by the substrate to the resting enzyme through two one-electron steps. The switch from one tertiary structure to another is expected to be induced by substrate bind  相似文献   

6.
A spectrophotometric method of quantification of hemoglobin-like proteins, which makes it possible to determine their concentration in mixtures of various composition, was proposed. This method is based on comparing the optical density of different redox forms of proteins when their spectra are superposed at the isosbestic point. The coefficients used in calculations were determined by us. The proposed technique is simple and does not require special procedures. It was tested using myoglobin solutions of various concentrations, myoglobin solutions containing other proteins, and solutions of leghemoglobin (a myoglobin-like protein from legumes).  相似文献   

7.
A spectrophotometric method of quantification of hemoglobin-like proteins, which makes it possible to determine their concentration in mixtures of various composition, was proposed. This method is based on comparing the optical density of different redox forms of proteins when their spectra are superposed at the isosbestic point. The coefficients used in calculations were determined by us. The proposed technique is simple and does not require special procedures. It was tested using myoglobin solutions of various concentrations, myoglobin solutions containing other proteins, and solutions of leghemoglobin (a myoglobin-like protein from legumes).  相似文献   

8.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical spectra are used as probes of the heme and its ligands in ferric and ferrous leghemoglobin. The proximal ligand to the heme iron atom of ferric soybean leghemoglobin is identified as imidazole by comparison of the EPR of leghemoglobin hydroxide, azide, and cyanide with the corresponding derivatives of human hemoglobin. Optical spectra show that ferric soybean leghemoglobin near room temperature is almost entirely in the high spin state. At 77 K the optical spectrum is that of a low spin compound, while at 1.6 K the EPR is that of a low spin form resembling bis-imidazole heme. Acetate binds to ferric leghemoglobin to form a high spin complex as judged from the optical spectrum. The EPR of this complex is that of high spin ferric heme in a nearly axial environment. The complexes of ferrous leghemoglobin with substituted pyridines exhibit optical absorption maxima near 685 nm, whose absorption maxima and extinctions are strongly dependent on the nature of the substitutents of the pyridine ring; electron withdrawing groups on the pyridine ring shift the absorption maxima to lower energy. A crystal field analysis of the EPR of nicotinate derivatives of ferric leghemoblobin demonstrates that the pyridine nitrogen is also bound to the heme iron in the ferric state. These findings lead us to picture leghemoglobin as a somewhat flexible molecule in which the transition region between the E and F helices may act as a hinge, opening a small amount at higher temperature to a stable configuration in which the protein is high spin and can accommodate exogenous ligand molecules and closing at low temperature to a second stable configuration in which the protein is low spin and in which close approach of the E helix permits the distal histidine to become the principal sixth ligand.  相似文献   

9.
The microenvironment of the iron in a sea turtle Dermochelys coriacea myoglobin is studied using the spectroscopic techniques EPR and optical absorption. Optical absorption spectra in the visible region suggest a great homology between turtle Mb and other myoglobins, such as those from whale, human and elephant. The pK of the acid-alkaline transition is 8.4 slightly lower than the pK of whale and equal to that of elephant myoglobin. The EPR spectrum at pH 7.0 is characteristic of a high-spin configuration with axial symmetry (gx = gy = 5.95). At higher pH, this signal changes in a way different from that observed for whale myoglobin. We observe for turtle Mb both the formation of a low-spin configuration with rhombic symmetry (gx = 2.56, gy = 2.20, gz = 1.90) and of a high-spin species with rhombic distortion (gx = 6.79, gy = 5.18, gz = 2.12). This suggests a lowering of symmetry at the haem, so that now the x and y directions are no more equivalent. This can be explained by amino acid substitution at the distal positions of haem or to off-axial positioning of distal residues. The coexistence at high pH (pH 11.0) of these two spin forms could be explained by the existence of two protein conformations, in which the crystal field splitting factor, delta, and the electron exchange energy are of the same order, allowing the presence of different configurations simultaneously. The presence of different kinds of haem is ruled out by the experiments with nitrosyl turtle Mb and turtle Mb-F showing spectra very similar to those of whale myoglobin. The pk of the acid-alkaline transition, 8.5, obtained from EPR spectra, agrees very well with results from optical absorption.  相似文献   

10.
Ferrous leghemoglobin reacts with hydrogen peroxide to form the stable product, leghemoglobin(IV). The reaction follows second order kinetics (k = 2.24 X 10(4) M-1 S-1 at 20 degrees C) and may be regarded as a single-step, two-electron oxidation. Ferric leghemoglobin is not an intermediate. The oxidation state of leghemoglobin(IV) is established by reductive titration with dithionite; 2 eq of dithionite are required to convert 1 mol of leghemoglobin(IV) to ferrous leghemoglobin. An outstanding property of leghemoglobin(IV) is its stability, little change is noted after 12 h at 25 degrees C. Leghemoglobin(IV) differs from the higher oxidation states of other hemoglobins and myoglobins in that it does not react with hydrogen peroxide to form the oxygenated protein.  相似文献   

11.
The 1H nuclear magnetic resonance characteristics of met-cyano and met-aquo hemoglobin from the sheep bile duct parasite Dicrocoelium dendriticum have been compared to those of other monomeric hemoglobins and myoglobins. By varying temperature and pH, it was found that the studied material is a mixture of several isozymes differing slightly in their structural features around the heme cavity. The heme in-plane rhombic asymmetry, as indicated by the spread of the heme methyl hyperfine shifts, is intermediate between that of sperm whale myoglobin and leghemoglobin. The proximal histidine is present and its dynamic properties, as probed by the exchange of the ring NH with bulk solvent protons, point towards a cavity more stable than those of sperm whale myoglobin and leghemoglobin. In the met-cyano form, an exchangeable proton was detected close to the iron center that was tentatively assigned to an arginine residue located three amino acid residues closer to the C terminus than the proximal histidine. The transition from the met-aquo form to the met-hydroxy form occurring at pH 8.1 and previously detected by optical methods was observed. Furthermore, consideration of the mean heme methyl hyperfine shift average indicates that the iron remains six-co-ordinate down to below pH 4.5 irrespective of an acid-transition (pK approximately 5) in the protein. However, the presence of a "pseudo" six-co-ordinate (i.e. high-spin, in-plane, five-co-ordinate) iron at pH values below the acid-transition pK cannot be excluded on the basis of the presently available data. The pH dependence of several resonances in both the met-cyano and met-aquo forms of the protein reflect a pK value compatible with the titration of a heme propionate.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of various linear and branched chain alkylisocyanides to soybean leghemoglobin has been studied with respect to association and dissociation kinetics and the results compared with those obtained in parallel on sperm whale and horse heart myoglobins; the linear ligands used (methyl to n-heptyl) cover a greater distribution of chain lengths than hitherto used. The association rate constants are much higher for leghemoglobin than for myoglobin, while the dissociation rates are slower. For a given protein, the dissociation rate constants are not much different when different isocyanides are used (except for methyl), whereas the association rates show complex behavior in relation with the alkyl chain length; singular differences are observed between leghemoglobin and sperm whale myoglobin in this regard. For myoglobin, the binding rate constants decrease from methyl to n-propyl, but remain approximately the same when the ligand carries a still longer alkyl chain. In contrast, for leghemoglobin, although the rate constants decrease from methyl to n-propyl, they show a progressive and important rise with longer alkyl substituents: n-butyl and n-pentyl.  相似文献   

13.
Detailed comparisons of the carbon monoxide FTIR spectra and ligand-binding properties of a library of E7, E11, and B10 mutants indicate significant differences in the role of electrostatic interactions in the distal pockets of wild-type sperm whale myoglobin and soybean leghemoglobin. In myoglobin, strong hydrogen bonds from several closely related conformations of the distal histidine (His(E7)) side chain preferentially stabilize bound oxygen. In leghemoglobin, the imidazole side chain of His(E7) is confined to a single conformation, which only weakly hydrogen bonds to bound ligands. The phenol side chain of Tyr(B10) appears to "fix" the position of His(E7), probably by donating a hydrogen bond to the Ndelta atom of the imidazole side chain. The proximal pocket of leghemoglobin is designed to favor strong coordination bonds between the heme iron and axial ligands. Thus, high oxygen affinity in leghemoglobin is established by a favorable staggered geometry of the proximal histidine. The interaction between His(E7) and Tyr(B10) prevents overstabilization of bound oxygen. If hydrogen bonding from His(E7) were as strong as it is in mammalian myoglobin, the resultant ultrahigh affinity of leghemoglobin would prevent oxygen transport in root nodules.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of substitution of vinyl groups of hemin with formyl groups on the optical and ligand binding properties of horse heart ferric myoglobin were investigated. The peak positions as well as the line shapes of the absorption spectra of the ferric derivatives of three kinds of formylmyoglobin, 2-vinyl-4-formyl-, 2-formyl-4-vinyl-, and 2,4-diformylmyoglobins depend on the number and the position of the formyl groups. Absorption maxima in the Soret region of the acid forms of these ferric formylmyoglobins in 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer, pH 6.0, at 20 degrees were 415.2, 422, and 429 nm, respectively. The acid forms of these formylmyoglobins exhibit absorption spectra of the mixture of high- and low spin states at ambient temperature. Since proto-, deutero- and mesomyoglobins have a high spin state under the same condition, the increase of the low spin iron in these formylmyoglobins may be due to the strong electron withdrawal by the formyl groups toward the periphery of the porphyrin ring. The affinities of these ferric formylmyoglobins and protomyoglobin for N3-, F-, OCN-, and SCN- increased in the order of proto-, monoformyl-monovinyl-, 2,4-diformyl-myoglobin, which corresponds to the increasing order of electron-withdrawing power of the porphyrin side chains. The pKa values of the acid-alkaline transition decreased in the same order. Although the ferric forms of the two isomeric monoformyl-monovinylmyoglobins exhibited different optical spectra, the dissociation constants of the complexes of these isomers for various ligands were similar to each other. The pKa values of the acid-alkaline transition were also similar. These results indicate that affinities of ferric myoglobin for ligands, in contrast to those of the ferrous form for oxygen and carbon monoxide (Sono, M., and Asakura, T. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 5527-5232 and Sono, M., Smith, P.D., McCray, J.A., and Asakura, T. (1976) J. Biol. Chem 251, 1418-1426), are not affected by the position of modifications at the two vinyl groups, but are determinedby the number of the formyl groups and that two vinyl groups at position 2 and 4 are equivalent in the binding of various ligands by ferric myoglobin. The electron density of the ferric iron appears to be similar for the two isomeric monoformyl-monovinylmyoglobins.  相似文献   

15.
Structural analysis of a monomeric hemoglobin from the cyanobacterium Nostoc commune strain UTEX 584, cyanoglobin (Potts et al. (1992) Science 256, 1690–1692), is presented. Cyanoglobin binds molecular oxygen reversibly, with high oxygen affinity and non-cooperativity. There was no evidence for decreased stability of the pigment at 37°C. Cyanoglobin-specific antibodies showed no cross-reactivity with two reference hemoglobins, leghemoglobin a and sperm whale myoglobin. The absorption spectral properties of cyanoglobin differ significantly from those of the two reference hemoglobins. The spectrum of oxy-cyanoglobin most closely resembles that of an oxy-hemoglobin from the protozoan Tetrahymena pyriformis, a hemoprotein that shares substantial amino-acid sequence identity with cyanoglobin. Met-cyanoglobin possesses spectral characteristics at pH 7.0–9.0 that resemble those of the alkaline met-hemoglobin (a putative hemichrome) of another protozoan, Paramecium caudatum. The spin-state character of met-cyanoglobin is pH-dependent. Met-cyanoglobin does not coordinate the strong-field ligands, cyanide and azide, at pH 7.0. The capacity of cyanoglobin to coordinate cyanide increased with decreasing pH. Far-UV CD spectra of cyanoglobin are indicative of a protein with a significant amount of alpha-helical structure. Data from Soret-region CD spectra suggest that the orientations of the heme moieties in cyanoglobin and leghemoglobin a are similar to one another.  相似文献   

16.
In this article, we have extensively studied and discussed the magnetic properties of acidic ferric hemoglobin and its isolated chains. The magnetic susceptibility, EPR and optical spectra of those samples were measured in the temperature region below 77 degrees K. By the magnetic susceptibility measurements, it could be made clear that at an acidic pH value, both ferric hemoglobin and its isolated chains were constituted of a mixture of two spin states (high-spin state S = 5/2 and low-spin state S = 1/2) and the ratio of this mixture varied in each protein sample, but was independent of the temperature change below 77 degrees K. The co-existence of these two components could be ascertained by the observation of EPR spectra at liquid hydrogen temperature. Acidic ferric hemoglobin and its isolated chains exhibited the two components of EPR spectra which corresponded to their magnetic susceptibility, and it was found that the relaxation time of the low-spin state was longer than that of the high-spin state. The low-spin component of EPR spectra was almost undetectable at liquid nitrogen temperature. The three principal g values of this low-spin were gz = 2.80, gy = 2.20, and gx = 1.70. At alkaline pH values these low-spin components and the high-spin component of EPR spectra were displaced by the different low-spin spectra which corresponded to the ferric hemoglobin-hydroxide complex. It seems that the magnetic properties of the high-spin component are the same as the acidic ferric myoglobin, and the fine structure of the iron ion also seems to be same. Optical spectroscopy also gave similar magnetic properties which corresponded to the magnetic measurements.  相似文献   

17.
The emission spectra of the porphyrin in metal-free and Zn cytochrome c and in metal-free mesoporphyrin derivatives of horseradish peroxidases A and C, leghemoglobin, and myoglobin were examined as a function of temperature and excitation wavelength. At room temperature, the emission spectra were unresolved and were independent of excitation wavelength. At low temperature (4.2 K), the spectra depended upon excitation wavelength: using narrow-band excitation into the high-energy side of the 0-1 and 0-0 bands gave unresolved emission spectra whereas excitation into the low-energy side produced quasi-line spectra. The resolved spectra were different for the five proteins and further varied with pH, indicating chromophore-protein interactions. The spectra are interpreted in terms of site selection and phonon interactions.  相似文献   

18.
In leghemoglobin a, which is the major hemoglobin component in soybean root nodules, the haem iron has been replaced by cobalt. The electron spin resonance (ESR) of frozen solutions of the cobalt-substituted leghemoglobin has been studied at 77 K in the deoxy and oxy forms respectively. Both ligation states exhibit rhombic g tensors. The hyperfine constants of 59Co, 14N-imidazole (residue of the proximal histidine) and 14N-pyrroles are determined for the three principal directions of the g tensor. Both, the oxy and the deoxy state exhibit pH-dependent changes of the hyperfine structures. For oxy cobalt leghemoglobin a quantitative analysis of the pH titration and of the ESR parameters of the low and high-pH forms respectively are performed. The interconversion of the low and the high-pH forms is controlled by a proton-dissociating group with pK=6.4 which is most probably the distal histidine. g tensors and hyperfine constants are compared with those described for oxy cobalt myoglobin crystal spectra [34] allowing assignments of the low and high-pH species of leghemoglobin to stereoelectronic structures with non-equivalent and equivalent dioxygen atoms respectively. Hydrogen-bonding of the distal histidine with dioxygen favours the structure with equivalent oxygen atoms. The pH dependence of the deoxy form is interpreted as interaction of the proximal imidazole with the central cobalt atom.  相似文献   

19.
The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of soybean ferric leghemoglobin a in the low-spin cyanide and nicotinate complexes have been assigned by specific deuteration of heme methyl groups. The assignments differ from those obtained solely from nuclear Overhauser enhancement measurements and are indicative of a proximal histidyl imidazole-hemin interaction which is very similar to that found in sperm whale myoglobin. The absence of a hyperfine shifted exchangeable NH peak for the distal histidine in leghemoglobin suggests either a very different orientation for this distal ligand or a significantly faster exchange rate with bulk solvent than found in myoglobin.  相似文献   

20.
Visible and near infrared magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of heme proteins and enzymes as well as those of a protein-free heme bound to 2-methylimidazole were recorded and compared at 4.2 K in unrelaxed metastable and relaxed equilibrium heme stereochemistry. The relaxed and unrelaxed stereochemistries of a 5-coordinate ferrous heme were generated by chemical reduction of iron at room temperature before freezing the sample and by photolysis of CO or O2 complexes at 4.2 K, respectively. The results are discussed in terms of a protein contribution into energies of the Fe-N epsilon(His) and Fe-N(pyrrols) bonds and their change on a ligand binding. We observed and analyzed cases of weak (myoglobin, hemoglobin) and strong (leghemoglobin, peroxidases) constraints imposed by the protein conformation on the proximal heme stereochemistry by comparing the bond energies in proteins with those in the protoheme-(2-methylimidazole) model compound. The role of a protein moiety in modulating the ligand binding properties of leghemoglobin and the heme reactivity of horseradish peroxidase is discussed.  相似文献   

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