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1.
The ferric form of the homodimeric hemoglobin from Scapharca inaequivalvis (HbI) displays a unique pH-dependent behavior involving the interconversion among a monomeric low-spin hemichrome, a dimeric high-spin aquomet six-coordinate derivative, and a dimeric high-spin five-coordinate species that prevail at acidic, neutral, and alkaline pH values, respectively. In the five-coordinate derivative, the iron atom is bound to a hydroxyl group on the distal side since the proximal Fe-histidine bond is broken, possibly due to the packing strain exerted by the Phe97 residue on the imidazole ring [Das, T. K., Boffi, A., Chiancone, E. and Rousseau, D. L. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 2916-2919]. To determine the proximal and distal effects on the coordination and spin state of the iron atom and on the association state, two heme pocket mutants have been investigated by means of optical absorption, resonance Raman spectroscopy, and analytical ultracentrifugation. Mutation of the distal histidine to an apolar valine causes dramatic changes in the coordination and spin state of the iron atom that lead to the formation of a five-coordinate derivative, in which the proximal Fe-histidine bond is retained, at acidic pH values and a high-spin, hydroxyl-bound six-coordinate derivative at neutral and alkaline pH values. At variance with native HbI, the His69 --> Val mutant is always high-spin and does not undergo dissociation into monomers at acidic pH values. The Phe97 --> Leu mutant, like the native protein, forms a monomeric hemichrome species at acidic pH values. However, at alkaline pH, it does not give rise to the unusual hydroxyl-bound five-coordinate derivative but forms a six-coordinate derivative with the proximal His and distal hydroxyl as iron ligands.  相似文献   

2.
CO binding kinetics to the homodimeric myoglobin (Mb) from Nassa mutabilis has been investigated between pH 1.9 and 7.0. Protonation of the proximal imidazole at low pH (less than or equal to 3.0) and the consequent cleavage of the HisF8NE2-Fe proximal bond brings about a approximately 20-fold increase of the second-order rate constant for CO binding. This process displays a pKa = 4.0 +/- 0.2, significantly higher than that observed in all other deoxygenated hemoproteins investigated up to now. Such a feature underlies a decreased energy for the HisF8NE2-Fe proximal bond in the unliganded form and it also appears supported by resonance Raman spectroscopy in the low frequency region of the Fe(II) deoxygenated hemoprotein. Further, the pH-rate profile of N. mutabilis Mb, like that of the homodimeric hemoglobin (Hb) from Scapharca inaequivalvis (Coletta, M., Boffi, A., Ascenzi, P., Brunori, M. and Chiancone, E. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 4828-4830), can be described only by assuming a concerted proton-linked transition with n = 1.8 +/- 0.1. Such a characteristic suggests, also on the basis of the amino acid sequence homology between N. mutabilis Mb and S. inaequivalvis Hb in the region forming the subunit interface, that the interaction mechanism is similar for the two homodimeric proteins, and drastically different Hb in the region forming the subunit interface, that the interaction mechanism is similar for the two homodimeric proteins, and drastically different from that operative in other hemoproteins.  相似文献   

3.
The unique functional properties of the homodimeric hemoglobin (HbI) extracted from the Arcid blood clam Scapharca inaequivalvis are discussed in the light of the unusual assembly of this protein. At variance with vertebrate hemoglobins, in S. inaequivalvis HbI, the heme-carrying E and F helices form the subunit interface and bring the heme groups almost into direct contact. This creates a new pathway for transferring information about the ligation state of the heme from one subunit to the other which allows cooperativity in the binding of heme ligands to be displayed by a homodimer. The tight coupling between the two subunits and the two heme groups also manifests itself in other reactions that are cooperative in S. inaequivalvis HbI, but not in human hemoglobin, namely, the cleavage of the proximal histidine-heme iron bond and the modification of specific residues located at the subunit interface.  相似文献   

4.
A native globin from the dimeric hemoglobin, hemoglobin I, of the mollusc Scapharca inaequivalvis has been obtained with the acid-acetone method. The globin has a lower sedimentation coefficient than the native protein at neutral pH; its reconstitution product with natural heme has the same physicochemical and functional properties as the native protein. proto- and meso-cobalt hemoglobin I have been prepared and characterized. proto-Cobalt hemoglobin I binds oxygen reversibly with a lower affinity and a lower cooperativity than native hemoglobin I; thus, the changes in the functional properties brought about by substitution of iron with cobalt are similar to those observed in human hemoglobin A. The EPR spectra of deoxy-proto-cobalt hemoglobin I and of the photolysis product of oxy-meso-cobalt hemoglobin I indicate that two histidine residues are the apical heme ligands. The broad signal at g = 2.38 in deoxy-proto-cobalt hemoglobin I points to a constrained structure of the heme site in this derivative which results from a distorted coordination of the hindered proximal histidine. A similar structure has been proposed previously for the alpha chains in deoxy-cobalt hemoglobin A.  相似文献   

5.
The group II truncated hemoglobin from Bacillus subtilis has been cloned, expressed, purified, and characterized. B. subtilis truncated hemoglobin is a monomeric protein endowed with an unusually high oxygen affinity (in the nanomolar range) such that the apparent thermodynamic binding constant for O2 exceeds that for CO by 1 order of magnitude. The kinetic basis of the high oxygen affinity resides mainly in the very slow rate of ligand release. The extremely stable ferrous oxygenated adduct is resistant to oxidation, which can be achieved only with oxidant in large excess, e.g. ferricyanide in 50-fold molar excess. The three-dimensional crystal structure of the cyano-Met derivative was determined at 2.15 A resolution. Although the overall fold resembles that of other truncated hemoglobins, the distal heme pocket displays a unique array of hydrophilic side chains in the topological positions that dominate the steric interaction with iron-bound ligands. In fact, the Tyr-B10, Thr-E7, and Gln-E11 oxygens on one side of the heme pocket and the Trp-G8 indole NE1 nitrogen on the other form a novel pattern of the "ligand-inclusive hydrogen bond network" described for mycobacterial HbO. On the proximal side, the histidine residue is in an unstrained conformation, and the iron-His bond is unusually short (1.91 A).  相似文献   

6.
The binding of NO to the iron heme in guanylate cyclase and other heme proteins induces the cleavage of the proximal histidine bonded to the metal. In this study we assess by means of density functional theory (DFT) electronic structure calculations the role of H-bonding to histidine in the modulation of this effect. We have considered in the first place a model of the isolated active site coordinated with imidazole and imidazolate to mimic the effects of a very strong H-bond. We have also investigated four selected ferrous heme proteins with different proximal histidine environments: the O(2) sensing FixL, horseradish peroxidase C, and the alpha and beta subunits of human hemoglobin. Our results indicate that polarization and charge transfer effects associated with H-bonding to the proximal histidine play a fundamental role in the modulation of the NO trans effect in heme proteins. We also find computational evidence suggesting that protein structural constraints may affect significantly the cleavage of the Fe-His bond.  相似文献   

7.
Kinetics of CO binding to human hemoglobin (Hb) has been followed below neutrality. With respect to the behavior observed at pH 7.0, CO binding to deoxy-Hb at pH 2.3 displays a much faster second-order combination rate constant (1.2 x 10(-7) M-1 s-1) and loss of the autocatalytic character of the kinetic progress curve. The spectroscopic features of the transient deoxy-Hb at pH 2.75 indicate the phenomenon to be related to the cleavage of the proximal histidine N epsilon-Fe bond, as reported for monomeric hemoproteins (Coletta, M., Ascenzi, P., Traylor, T. G., and Brunori, M. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 4151-4155). The faster CO binding rate constant, higher than that characteristic of the R state, cannot be attributed to either (i) an enhanced dimerization of deoxy-Hb at low pH, or (ii) a quaternary switch of the unliganded form to the R0 state. The data indicate that interaction(s) of the heme on the proximal side is crucial in accounting for the difference in the CO binding rate constant between the two quaternary conformations of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

8.
The homodimeric hemoglobin from the mollusk Scapharca inaequivalvis possesses a single reactive cysteine residue per monomer, Cys92, which is located in the subunit interface in the vicinity of the heme group. The interplay between the heme iron and Cys92 towards the reaction with NO has been investigated by the combined use of electrospray mass spectrometry, FTIR and UV-Visible spectroscopy. When the ferrous liganded or unliganded protein reacts with free NO in solution Cys92 is not modified, but undergoes nitrosation when the hemoglobin is exposed to the nitric oxide releaser S-nitrosocysteine. When the ferric protein reacts with free NO under anaerobic conditions the heme iron is reduced and Cys92 is nitrosated. At variance with other hemeproteins investigated to date, in Scapharca HbI the heme-iron NO driven reduction is not accompanied by the formation of a ferric iron nitrosyl intermediate in detectable amounts. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the nitrosating agent is the NO(+) species, which is generated during the NO driven reduction of the ferric heme iron. The possible reaction mechanism is discussed in comparison with recent findings on human hemoglobin and myoglobin.  相似文献   

9.
Opossum hemoglobin assumes a T quaternary structure upon NO ligation in the absence of organic phophates at pH 6.7. In addition, stripped opossum hemoglobin exhibits a low oxygen affinity when compared to human hemoglobin and a pH-dependent heme-heme interaction with an n value of 2.14 at pH 7.0 and 2.46 at pH 7.35. These observations indicate that opossum hemoglobin may have a destabilized oxy structure when compared to hemoglobin A due to differences in primary structure. Thus, the strong trans ligand effect of nitric oxide is able to disrupt the proximal histidine-iron bond in the alpha-hemes triggering a conformational transition to the T state. Absence of a distal histidine in the alpha-subunits and, therefore an impaired donor acceptor interaction with the sixth ligand, could contribute to the lack of stability of the R quaternary structure in opossum nitrosylhemoglobin. The reduced oxygen affinity of opossum hemoglobin may be compensated for by other physiological factors such as a reduced phosphate effect.  相似文献   

10.
We report the optical and resonance Raman spectral characterization of ferrous recombinant Chlamydomonas LI637 hemoglobin. We show that it is present in three pH-dependent equilibrium forms including a 4-coordinate species at acid pH, a 5-coordinate high spin species at neutral pH, and a 6-coordinate low spin species at alkaline pH. The proximal ligand to the heme is the imidazole group of a histidine. Kinetics of the reactions with ligands were determined by stopped-flow spectroscopy. At alkaline pH, combination with oxygen, nitric oxide, and carbon monoxide displays a kinetic behavior that is interpreted as being rate-limited by conversion of the 6-coordinate form to a reactive 5-coordinate form. At neutral pH, combination rates of the 5-coordinate form with oxygen and carbon monoxide were much faster (>10(7) microM-1 s-1). The dissociation rate constant measured for oxygen is among the slowest known, 0.014 s-1, and is independent of pH. Replacement of the tyrosine 63 (B10) by leucine or of the putative distal glutamine by glycine increases the dissociation rate constant 70- and 30-fold and increases the rate of autoxidation 20- and 90-fold, respectively. These results are consistent with at least two hydrogen bonds stabilizing the bound oxygen molecule, one from tyrosine B10 and the other from the distal glutamine. In addition, the high frequency (232 cm-1) of the iron-histidine bond suggests a structure that lacks any proximal strain thus contributing to high ligand affinity.  相似文献   

11.
Proton NMR spectra have been measured for the two hemoglobins from the mollusc Scapharca inaequivalvis: HbI, a homodimer, and HbII, a heterotetramer. These hemoglobins are endowed with a unique subunit assembly, since the heme carrying E and F helices are involved in the major intersubunit contact. In the far-downfield region of hyperfine-shifted resonances the spectra of HbI and HbII in the deoxy state show respectively one (66.7 ppm) and two (67.8 and 63.6 ppm) exchangeable signals of the proximal histidine N delta H groups, the resonance position being indicative of a significant strain in the iron-imidazole interaction. In the hydrogen-bonded proton region, inter- and intrasubunit hydrogen-bonded proton signals have been detected for both hemoglobins. Deoxy-HbI shows two unique downfield resonances at 11.83 and 11.51 ppm which disappear in the oxygenated state, suggesting that the corresponding hydrogen bonds are involved in the stabilization of the tertiary and/or quaternary structure of the deoxy form. HbII shows even smaller changes in this region upon changes in ligation state. These results therefore provide further proof that, at variance with the vertebrate hemoglobin tetramer, the unique subunit assembly of these proteins is stabilized mainly by hydrophobic interactions.  相似文献   

12.
He C  Neya S  Knipp M 《Biochemistry》2011,50(40):8559-8575
The factors leading to the breakage of the proximal iron-histidine bond in the ferroheme protein soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) are still a matter of debate. This event is a key mechanism in the sensing of NO that leads to the production of the second-messenger molecule cGMP. Surprisingly, in the heme protein nitrophorin 7 (NP7), we noticed by UV-vis absorbance spectroscopy and resonance Raman spectroscopy that heme reduction leads to a loss of the proximal histidine coordination, which is not observed for the other isoproteins (NP1-4). Structural considerations led to the generation and spectroscopic investigation of site-directed mutants NP7(E27V), NP7(E27Q), NP4(D70A), and NP2(V24E). Spectroscopic investigation of these proteins shows that the spatial arrangement of residues Glu27, Phe43, and His60 in the proximal heme pocket of NP7 is the reason for the weakened Fe(II)-His60 bond through steric demand. Spectroscopic investigation of the sample of NP7 reconstituted with 2,4-dimethyldeuterohemin ("symmetric heme") demonstrated that the heme vinyl substituents are also responsible. Whereas the breaking of the iron-histidine bond is rarely seen among unliganded ferroheme proteins, the breakage of the Fe(II)-His bond upon binding of NO to the sixth coordination site is sometimes observed because of the negative trans effect of NO. However, it is still rare among the heme proteins, which is in contrast to the case for trans liganded nitrosyl model hemes. Thus, the question of which factors determine the Fe(II)-His bond labilization in proteins arises. Surprisingly, mutant NP2(V24E) turned out to be particularly similar in behavior to sGC; i.e., the Fe(II)-His bond is sensitive to breakage upon NO binding, whereas the unliganded form binds the proximal His at neutral pH. To the best of our knowledge, NP2(V24E) is the first example in which the ability to use the His-on ? His-off switch was engineered into a heme protein by site-directed mutagenesis other than the proximal His itself. Steric tension is, therefore, introduced as a potential structural determinant for proximal Fe(II)-His bond breakage in heme proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Ligand binding to the heme distal side is a paradigm of heme-protein biochemistry, the proximal axial ligand being in most cases a His residue. NO binds to the ferrous heme-Fe-atom giving rise to hexa-coordinated adducts (as in myoglobin and hemoglobin) with His and NO as proximal and distal axial ligands, respectively, or to penta-coordinated adducts (as in soluble guanylate cyclase) with NO as the axial distal ligand. Recently, the ferrous derivative of Alcaligenes xylosoxidans cytochrome c' (Axcyt c') and of cardiolipin-bound horse heart cytochrome c (CL-hhcyt c) have been reported to bind NO to the "dark side" of the heme (i.e., as the proximal axial ligand) replacing the endogenous ligand His. Conversely, CL-free hhcyt c behaves as ferrous myoglobin by binding NO to the heme distal side, keeping His as the proximal axial ligand. Moreover, the ferrous derivative of CL-hhcyt c binds CO at the heme distal side, the proximal axial ligand being His. Furthermore, CL-hhcyt c shows peroxidase activity. In contrast, CL-free hhcyt c does not bind CO and does not show peroxidase activity. This suggests that heme-proteins may utilize both sides of the heme for ligand discrimination, which appears to be modulated allosterically. Here, structural and functional aspects of NO binding to ferrous Axcyt c' and (CL-)hhcyt c are reviewed.  相似文献   

14.
The homodimeric hemoglobin from Scapharca inaequivalvis has an unusual spatial arrangement of the subunits (Royer, W.E., Jr., Love, W.E., and Fenderson, F.F. (1985) Nature 316, 277-280). The time course of oxygen and nitric oxide rebinding to this protein following flash photolysis has been measured on a nanosecond time scale. A large amplitude is observed with a half-time of 20 ns (NO). With oxygen the half-time decreases from 70 ns at low fractional photolysis to 30 ns at large breakdown. The second order rate of NO binding is 1.6 x 10(7)/MS, and is the same as that for oxygen. Analysis of the geminate data suggests that oxygen and nitric oxide react more rapidly with the heme than in myoglobin, but also escape much more rapidly from its vicinity.  相似文献   

15.
The homodimeric cooperative hemoglobin from the mollusk Scapharca inaequivalvis displays an unusual subunit assembly with respect to vertebrate hemoglobins. The intersubunit contact region is formed by the two heme-carrying E and F helices, which bring the two hemes in contact with each other. At variance with tetrameric vertebrate hemoglobins, the ligand binding is not accompanied by a significant quaternary transition. The major ligand-linked changes are tertiary and are limited to the heme pocket and subunit interface. These unique structural features of HbI are not easily reconciled with the classical thermodynamic models used to describe cooperative ligand binding in vertebrate hemoglobins. The lack of distinct quaternary states and the absence of allosteric effectors suggested that cooperativity in HbI is entirely homotropic in origin. Thereafter, high resolution X-ray crystallographic data displayed the preferential binding of water molecules at the intersubunit interface in the unliganded protein with respect to the liganded one. These ordered water molecules were thus proposed to act as heterotropic effectors in HbI. The contribution of specific water binding to the observed cooperativity in HbI is discussed in the framework of the enthalpy-entropy compensation effect emerging from previous accurate equilibrium oxygen binding measurements.  相似文献   

16.
The study of the thermal evolution of the Soret band in heme proteins has proved to be a useful tool to understand their stereodynamic properties; moreover, it enables one to relate protein matrix fluctuations and functional behavior when carried out in combination with kinetic experiments on carbon monoxide rebinding after flash photolysis. In this work, we report the thermal evolution of the Soret band of deoxy, carbonmonoxy, and nitric oxide derivatives of the cooperative homodimeric Scapharca inaequivalvis hemoglobin in the temperature range 10-300 K and the carbon monoxide rebinding kinetics after flash photolysis in the temperature range 60-200 K. The two sets of results indicate that Scapharca hemoglobin has a very rigid protein structure compared with other hemeproteins. This feature is brought out i) by the absence of nonharmonic contributions to the soft modes coupled to the Soret band in the liganded derivatives, and ii) by the almost "in plane" position of the iron atom in the photoproduct obtained approximately 10(-8) s after dissociating the bound carbon monoxide molecule at 15 K.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Studies of high spin ferrous and ferric derivatives led us to conclude that in the quaternary R structure the state of the hemes is similar to that in the free alpha and beta subunits, but in the T structure a tension acts on the hemes which tries to pull the iron and the proximal histidine further from the plane of the porphyrin. We have now studied the effect of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) on the three low spin ferrous compounds of hemoglobin with O2, CO, and NO. IHP failed to switch the quaternary structure of carbonmonoxy- and oxyhemoglobin A to the T state, but merely caused a transition to an as yet undefined modification of the R structure. IHP is known to cause a switch to the T structure in hemoglobin Kansas. We have found that this switch induces red shifts of the visible alpha and beta absorption bands and the appearance of a shoulder on the red side of the alpha band; these changes are very weak in carbonmonoxy- and slightly stronger in oxyhemoglobin Kansas. As already noted by previous authors, addition of IHP to nitrosylhemoglobin A induces all the changes in uv absorption and CD spectra, sulfhydryl reactivities, and exchangeable proton resonances normally associated with the R leads to T transition, and is accompanied by large changes in the Soret and visible absorption bands. Experiments with nitrosyl hybrids show that these changes in absorption are caused predominantly by the hemes in the alpha subunits. In the accompanying paper Maxwell and Caughey (J. C. Maxwell and W. S. Caughey (1976), Biochemistry, following paper in this issue) report that the NO in nitrosylhemoglobin without IHP gives a single ir stretching frequency characteristic for six-coordinated nitrosyl hemes; addition of IHP causes the appearance of a second ir band, of intensity equal to that of the first, which is characteristic for five-coordinated nitrosyl hemes. Taken together, these results show that the R leads to T transition causes either a rupture or at least a very dramatic stretching of the bond from the iron to the heme-linked histidine, such that an equilibrium is set up between five- and six-coordinated hemes, biased toward five-coordinated hemes in the alpha and six-coordinated ones in the beta subunits. The reason why IHP can switch nitrosyl-, but not carbonmonoxy- or oxyhemoglobin A, from the R to the T structure is to be found in the weakening of the iron-histidine bond by the unpaired NO electron and by the very short Fe-NO bond length.  相似文献   

19.
Sickle cell nitrosyl hemoglobin was examined for gelation by an ultracentrifugal method previously described (Briehl &; Ewert, 1973) and by birefringence. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate gelation which exhibited the endothermic temperature dependence seen in gels of deoxyhemoglobin S was observed by both techniques. In the absence of inositol hexaphosphate no gelation was observed, nor did nitrosyl hemoglobin A exhibit gelation. On the assumption that gelation is dependent on the deoxy or T (low ligand affinity) as opposed to the oxy or R (high ligand affinity) quaternary structure this supports the conclusion that nitrosyl hemoglobin S in inositol hexaphosphate assumes the T structure, in contrast to the other liganded ferrohemoglobin derivatives oxy and carbon monoxide hemoglobin. Assuming further that the quaternary structures and isomerizations are the same in hemoglobins A and S it can also be concluded that nitrosyl hemoglobin A in inositol hexaphosphate assumes the T state. Since no gelation was seen in stripped nitrosyl hemoglobin S, inositol hexaphosphate serves to effect an R to T switch in this derivative. Thus R-T isomerization in nitrosyl hemoglobin occurs without change in ligand binding at the sixth position of the heme group confirming the conclusion of Salhany (1974) and Salhany et al. (1974).Lowering of the pH toward 6 favors gelation of NO hemoglobin S as it does of deoxy and aquomethemoglobin S (Briehl &; Ewert, 1973,1974), consistent with a favoring of the T structure due to strengthening of the interchain salt bridges and the binding of inositol hexaphosphate and/or changes in site-to-site interactions on which gelation depends.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of pH on the X-band electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of ferrous nitrosylated human adult tetrameric hemoglobin (HbNO) as well as of ferrous nitrosylated monomeric alpha- and beta-chains has been investigated, at -163 degrees C. At pH 7.3, the X-band EPR spectrum of tetrameric HbNO and ferrous nitrosylated monomeric alpha- and beta-chains displays a rhombic shape. Lowering the pH from 7.3 to 3.0, tetrameric HbNO and ferrous nitrosylated monomeric alpha- and beta-chains undergo a transition towards a species characterized by a X-band EPR spectrum with a three-line splitting centered at 334mT. These pH-dependent spectroscopic changes may be taken as indicative of the cleavage, or the severe weakening, of the proximal HisF8-Fe bond. In tetrameric HbNO, the pH-dependent spectroscopic changes depend on the acid-base equilibrium of two apparent ionizing groups with pK(a) values of 5.8 and 3.8. By contrast, the pH-dependent spectroscopic changes occurring in ferrous nitrosylated monomeric alpha- and beta-chains depend on the acid-base equilibrium of one apparent ionizing group with pK(a) values of 4.8 and 4.7, respectively. The different pK(a) values for the proton-linked spectroscopic transition(s) of tetrameric HbNO and ferrous nitrosylated monomeric alpha- and beta-chains suggest that the quaternary assembly drastically affects the strength of the proximal HisF8-Fe bond in both subunits. This probably reflects a 'quaternary effect', i.e., structural changes in both subunits upon tetrameric assembly, which is associated to a relevant variation of functional properties (i.e., proton affinity).  相似文献   

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