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1.
The high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of carp hemoglobin have been compared to those of human normal adult hemoglobin. Carp deoxy and carbonmonoxy hemoglobins in the deoxy-type quaternary state exhibit two downfield exchangeable proton resonances as compared to four seen in human normal adult deoxyhemoglobin. This suggests that two of the hydrogen bonds present in human normal adult deoxyhemoglobin are absent or occur in very different environments in carp hemoglobin. One of the exchangeable proton resonances of carp hemoglobin, while present in the deoxy-type quaternary state of the carbonmonoxy and deoxy derivatives, is absent in the oxy-type quaternary state of both, in agreement with the assignments of these quaternary structures by other methods. The ring-current-shifted proton resonances (sensitive tertiary structural markers) of carp carbonmonoxyhemoglobin are substantially different from those of human normal adult hemoglobin. The aromatic proton resonance region of carp hemoglobin has fewer resonances than that of human normal adult hemoglobin, consistent with its much reduced histidine content. The hyperfine-shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable proton resonances of carp hemoglobin suggest that during the transition from the oxy to the deoxy quaternary structure, there is a greater alteration in the heme pocket of one type of subunits (presumably the beta chain) than that in the other subunit. The present results suggest that there are differences in both tertiary and quaternary structures between carp and human normal adult hemoglobins which could contribute to the great differences in the functional properties between these two proteins.  相似文献   

2.
K Ishimori  I Morishima 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4892-4898
The effect of heme modification on the tertiary and quaternary structures of hemoglobins was examined by utilizing the NMR spectra of the reconstituted [mesohemoglobin (mesoHb), deuterohemoglobin (deuteroHb)] and hybrid heme (meso-proto, deutero-proto) hemoglobins (Hbs). The heme peripheral modification resulted in the preferential downfield shift of the proximal histidine N1H signal for the beta subunit, indicating nonequivalence of the structural change induced by the heme modification in the alpha and beta subunits of Hb. In the reconstituted and hybrid heme Hbs, the exchangeable proton resonances due to the intra- and intersubunit hydrogen bonds, which have been used as the oxy and deoxy quaternary structural probes, were shifted by 0.2-0.3 ppm from that of native Hb upon the beta-heme substitution. This suggests that, in the fully deoxygenated form, the quaternary structure of the reconstituted Hbs is in an "imperfect" T state in which the hydrogen bonds located at the subunit interface are slightly distorted by the conformational change of the beta subunit. Moreover, the two heme orientations are found in the alpha subunit of deuteroHb, but not in the beta subunit of deuteroHb, and in both the alpha and beta subunits of mesoHb. The tertiary and quaternary structural changes in the Hb molecule induced by the heme peripheral modification were also discussed in relation to their functional properties.  相似文献   

3.
L W Fung  K L Lin  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1975,14(15):3424-3430
High-resoluiton proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 250 MHz has been used to investigate sickle cell hemoglobin. The hyperfine shifted, the ring-current shifted, and the exchangeable proton resonances suggest that the heme environment and the subunit interfaces of the sickle cell hemoglobin molecule are normal. These results suggest that the low oxygen affinity in sickle cell blood is not due to conformational alterations in the heme environment or the subunit interfaces. The C-2 proton resonances of certain histidyl residues can serve as structural probes for the surface conformation of the hemoglobin molecule. Several sharp resonances in sickle cell hemoglobin are shifted upfield from their positions in normal adult hemoglobin. These upfield shifts, which are observed in both oxy and deoxy forms of the molecule under various experimental conditions, suggest that some of the surface residues of sickle cell hemoglobin are altered and they may be in a more hydrophobic environment as compared with that of normal human adult hemoglobin. These differences in surface conformation are pH and ionic strength specific. In particular, upon the addition of organic phosphates to normal and sickle cell hemoglobin samples, the differences in their aromatic proton resonances diminish. These changes in the surface conformation may, in part, be responsible for the abnormal properties of sickle cell hemoglobin.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 250 MHz has been used to investigate the conformations of proximal histidyl residues of human normal adult hemoglobin, hemoglobin Kempsey [beta 99(G1) Asp leads to Asn], hemoglobin Osler [beta 145(HC2) Tyr leads to Asp], and hemoglobin McKees Rocks [beta 145(HC2) Tyr leads to Term] around neutral pH in H2O at 27 degrees C, all in the deoxy form. Two resonances that occur between 58 and 76 ppm downfield from the water proton signal have been assigned to the hyperfine shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable protons of the alpha- and beta-chains of deoxyhemoglobin. These two resonances are sensitive to the quaternary state of hemoglobin, amino acid substitutions in the alpha 1 beta 2-subunit interface and in the carboxy-terminal region of the beta-chain, and the addition of organic phosphates. The experimental results show that there are differences in the heme pockets among these four hemoglobins studied. The structural and dynamic information derived from the hyperfine shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable proton resonances complement that obtained from the ferrous hyperfine shifted and exchangeable proton resonances of deoxyhemoglobin over the spectral region from 5 to 20 ppm downfield from H2O. The relationship between these findings and Perutz's stereochemical mechanism for the cooperative oxygenation of hemoglobin is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Proton NMR spectra for nitrosyl-, aquomet- and deoxy des-Arg(α141)-hemoglobin in H2O were studied at high pressures up to 1400 atm with attention to the exchangeable proton resonances due to the intra- and intersubunit hydrogen bonds. For aquomethemoglboin, the T state marker signal at 6.4 ppm is insensitive to pressure while the R state marker signal at 6.0 ppm exhibits progressive upfield shift upon pressurization. For nitrosylhemoglobin, the T state signals at 9.6 and 6.5 ppm decrease their intensities upon pressurization while the R state marker signal at 6.0ppm remains unchanged. Pressure-induced spectral changes for some of exchangeable resonances are also encountered for deoxy des-Arg(α141)-hemoglobin while the R and T quaternary structural indicators at 6.0 and 9.4 ppm are insensitive to pressure. These pressure-induced spectral changes for these hemoglobin derivatives are significantly distinguished from those associated with the R-T transition induced by addition of IHP or by variatiuon of pH. It is therefore concluded that pressure induces subtle quaternary structural changes in these hemoglobin derivatives without causing the R-T transition.  相似文献   

7.
L W Fung  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1975,14(11):2526-2535
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of human hemoglobins in water reveal several exchangeable protons which are indicators of the quaternary structures of both the liganded and unliganded molecules. A comparison of the spectra of normal human adult hemoglobin with those of mutant hemoglobins Chesapeake (FG4alpha92 Arg yields Leu), Titusville (G1alpha94 Asp yields Asn), M Milwaukee (E11beta67 Val yields Glu), Malmo (FG4beta97 His yields Gln), Kempsey (G1beta99 Asp yields Asn), Yakima (G1beta99 Asp yields His), and New York (G15beta113 Val yields Glu), as well as with those of chemically modified hemoglobins Des-Arg(alpha141), Des-His(beta146), NES (on Cys-beta93)-Des-Arg(alpha141), and spin-labeled hemoglobin [Cys-beta93 reacted with N-(1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)iodoacetamide], suggests that the proton in the important hydrogen bond between the tyrosine at C7alpha42 and the aspartic acid at G1beta99, which anchors the alpha1beta2 subunits of deoxyhemoglobin (a characteristic feature of the deoxy quaternary structure), is responsible for the resonance at -9.4 ppm from water at 27 degrees. Another exchangeable proton resonance which occurs at -6.4 ppm from H2O is a spectroscopic indicator of the deoxy structure. A resonance at -5.8 ppm from H2O, which is an indicator of the oxy conformation, is believed to originate from the hydrogen bond between the aspartic acid at G1alpha94 and the asparagine at G4beta102 in the alpha1beta2 subunit interface (a characteristic feature of the oxy quaternary structure). In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH 6.2 both the -6.4- and the -5.8ppm resonances are present but not the -9.4-ppm resonance. Upon the addition of inositol hexaphosphate to methemoglobin at pH 6.2, the usual resonance at -9.4 ppm is shifted to -10 ppm and the resonance at 6.4 ppm is not observed. In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH greater than or equal to 7.6 with or without inositol hexaphosphate, the resonance at -5.8 ppm is present, but not those at -10 and -6.4 ppm, suggesting that methemoglobin at high pH has an oxy-like structure. Two resonances (at -8.2 and -7.3 ppm) which remain invariant in the two quaternary structures could come from exchangeable protons in the alpha1beta1 subunit interface and/or other exchangeable protons in the hemoglobin molecule which undergo no conformational changes during the oxygenation process. These exchangeable proton resonances serve as excellent spectroscopic probes of the quaternary structures of the subunit interfaces in studies of the molecular mechanism of cooperative ligand binding to hemoglobin.  相似文献   

8.
Using improved selective excitation methods for protein nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), we have conducted measurements of the oxygenation of hemoglobin inside intact human red blood cells. The selective excitation methods use pulse shape-insensitive suppression of the water signal, while producing uniform phase excitation in the region of interest and, thus, are suitable for a wide variety of applications in vivo. We have measured the areas of 1H-NMR resonances of the hyperfine-shifted, exchangeable N delta H protons of the proximal histidine residues of the alpha- and beta-chains in deoxyhemoglobin (63 and 76 ppm downfield from the proton resonance of 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonate (DSS), respectively), which are sensitive to the paramagnetic state of the iron, and for which the alpha- and beta-chain resonances are resolved, and from the ring current-shifted gamma 2-CH3 protons of the distal valine residues in oxyhemoglobin (2.4 ppm upfield from DSS), which are sensitive to the conformation of the heme pocket in the oxy state. We have found that the proximal histidine resonances are directly correlated with the degree of oxygenation of hemoglobin, whereas the distal valine resonances appear to be correlated with the conformation in the heme pocket that occurs after the binding of oxygen, in both the presence and absence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. In addition, from the proximal histidine resonances, we have observed a preference for the binding of oxygen to the alpha-chain (up to about 10%) of hemoglobin over the beta-chain in both the presence and absence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. These new results obtained in intact erythrocytes are consistent with our previous 1H-NMR studies on purified human normal adult hemoglobin. A unique feature of our 1H-NMR method is the ability to monitor the binding of oxygen specifically to the alpha- and beta-chains of hemoglobin both in solution and in intact red blood cells. This information is essential to our understanding of the molecular basis for the hemoglobin molecule serving as the oxygen carrier in vertebrates.  相似文献   

9.
I Morishima  M Hara 《Biochemistry》1983,22(17):4102-4107
In order to gain an insight into nonbonded interactions in the heme microenvironments of hemoproteins, proton NMR spectra of the cyanide and methylamine complexes of metmyoglobin and its derivatives reconstituted with deutero- and meso-hemins in H2O were studied under high pressures. The exchangeable NH proton of distal histidyl imidazole exhibits substantial pressure-induced shift while the proximal histidyl NH proton shows no pressure effect for the cyanide complexes. The heme peripheral proton signals, especially 5- and 8-methyl and vinyl C alpha H resonances, were also affected by pressure. These observations are interpreted as arising from pressure-induced structural changes in the heme crevice in which the pressure effects are localized to the distal side rather than the proximal side and from possible changes in the van der Waals contacts at the heme periphery with nearby amino acid residues.  相似文献   

10.
The abnormal human hemoglobin Malm? (beta97FG4 His leads to Gln) has been studied and its properties are compared with those of normal adult hemoglobin A. The data presented here show that the ring-current shifted proton resonances of both HbCO and HbO2 Malm? are very different from the corresponding forms of Hb A. The hyperfine shifted proton resonances of deoxy-Hb Malm? do not differ drastically from those of deoxy-Hb A. This result, together with the finding that the exchangeable proton resonances of the deoxy form of the two hemoglobins are similar, suggests that unliganded Hb Malm? can assume a deoxy-like quaternary structure both in the absence and presence of organic phosphates We have also compared the properties of Hb Malm? with those of Hb Chesapeake (alpha92FG4 Arg leads to Leu). This allows us to study the properties of two abnormal human hemoglobins with mutations at homologous positions of the alpha and beta chains in the three-dimenstional structure of the hemoglobin molecule. Our present results suggest that the mutaion at betaFG4 has its greatest effect on the teritiary structure of the heme pocket of the liganded forms of the hemoglobin while the mutation at alphaFG4 alters the deoxy structure of the hemoglogin molecule but does not alter the teriary structure of the heme pockets of the liganded form of the hemoglobin molecule. Both hemoglobins undergo a transition from the deoxy (T) to the oxy (R) quaternary structure upon ligation. The abnormally high oxygen affinities and low cooperativities of these two hemoglobins must therefore be due to either the structural differences which we have observed and/or to an altered transition between the T and R structures.  相似文献   

11.
Proton NMR has revealed two modes of structural heterogeneity in the monomeric hemoglobin I of Chironomus thummi thummi, CTT I; rotational disorder caused by a 180 degree rotation of the heme about the alpha, gamma-meso axis (primary heterogeneity), which varies for each preparation or reconstitution of this hemoglobin, and a 'silent' amino acid replacement [Thr/Ala exchange in position 98(FG4)] in the vicinity of the heme group, which is invariant under all experimental conditions. The heme rotational disorder (primary heterogeneity) can be removed by reconstitution of CTT I with the symmetrical protoheme III. The secondary splitting is not affected; the ratio of intensities of the two types of resonance remains constant. The 8-methyl and 3-methyl and one of the alpha-vinyl proton resonances for the major heme rotational component and the 5-methyl and 1-methyl and one of the alpha-vinyl proton resonances for the minor heme rotational component have been identified and assigned by reconstitution with deuterium-labeled heme. Decoupling experiments have been employed to assign vinyl beta protons in cis and trans position to the respective vinyl alpha protons. Hyperfine shifts for the heme protons exhibited no pH influence above pH 6, in accord with the lack of the alkaline Bohr effect. Below pH 6, pH effects are most strongly reflected by the 8-methyl and 5-methyl proton resonances possibly reflecting titration of the propionate groups.  相似文献   

12.
13.
High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of hemoglobins Providence-Asn (beta82EF6 Lys replaced by Asn) and Providence-Asp (beta82EF6 Lys replaced by Asp) show that different amino acid substitutions at the same position in the hemoglobin molecule have different effects on the structure of the protein molecule. Hemoglobin Providence-Asp appears to be in a low-affinity tertiary structure in both the deoxy and carbonmonoxy forms. Deoxyhemoglobin Providence-Asn has its beta heme resonance shifted downfield slightly from its position in normal adult hemoglobin; however, the tertiary structures of the heme pocket of hemoglobins A and Providence-Asn are very similar when both proteins are in the carbonmonoxy form. These results are consistent with the oxygen equilibrium measurements of Bonaventura, J., et al. [(1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 7563] which show that both Hb Providence-Asn and Hb Providence-Asp have oxygen affinities lower than normal adult hemoglobin, with Hb Providence-Asp having the lowest. Our studies of the effects of sodium chloride on the hyperfine shifted proton resonances of deoxyhemoglobins A, Providence-Asn, and Providence-Asp indicate that the beta82EF6 lysine is probably one, but not the only binding site for chloride ions.  相似文献   

14.
The mutation site in hemoglobin Rothschild (37 beta Trp----Arg) is located in the "hinge region" of the alpha 1 beta 2 interface, a region that is critical for normal hemoglobin function. The mutation results in greatly reduced cooperativity and an oxygen affinity similar to that of hemoglobin A [Gacon, G., Belkhodja, O., Wajcman, H., & Labie, D. (1977) FEBS Lett. 82, 243-246]. Crystal were grown under "low-salt" conditions [100 mM Cl- in 10 mM phosphate buffer at pH 7.0 with poly(ethylene glycol) as a precipitating agent]. The crystal structure of deoxyhemoglobin Rothschild and the isomorphous crystal structure of deoxyhemoglobin A were refined at resolutions of 2.0 and 1.9 A, respectively. The mutation-induced structural changes were partitioned into components of (1) tetramer rotation, (2) quaternary structure rearrangement, and (3) deformations of tertiary structure. The quaternary change involves a 1 degree rotation of the alpha subunit about the "switch region" of the alpha 1 beta 2 interface. The tertiary changes are confined to residues at the alpha 1 beta 2 interface, with the largest shifts (approximately 0.4 A) located across the interface from the mutation site at the alpha subunit FG corner-G helix boundary. Most surprising was the identification of a mutation-generated anion-binding site in the alpha 1 beta 2 interface. Chloride binds at this site as a counterion for Arg 37 beta. The requirement of a counterion implies that the solution properties of hemoglobin Rothschild, in particular the dimer-tetramer equilibrium, should be very dependent upon the concentration and type of anions present.  相似文献   

15.
16.
High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of deoxyhemoglobins Osler (beta145HC2 Tyr replaced by Asp) and McKees Rocks (beta 145HC2 Tyr replaced by term) indicate that these hemoglobins are predominately in the oxy quaternary structure in 0.1 M [bis(2-hydroxyethyl)imino]-tris(hydroxymethyl) methane buffer at pH 7. Upon the addition of inositol hexaphosphate, the proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of these hemoglobins become similar to those characteristic of a hemoglobin molecule in the deoxy quaternary structure. The exchangeable proton resonance which is found at -6.4 ppm from H2O in the spectrum of normal human adult deoxyhemoglobin is absent in the spectra of these two mutant hemoglobins. Consequently we believe the hydrogen bond between the hydroxyl group of tyrosine-beta145HC2 and the carboxyl oxygen of valine-beta98FG5 gives rise to this resonance. This assignment allows us to use the -6.4ppm resonance as an important tertiary structural probe in the investigation of the cooperative oxygenation of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

17.
Isolated beta chains from human adult hemoglobin at millimolar concentration are mainly associated to form beta 4 tetramers. We were able to obtain relevant two-dimensional proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of such supermolecular complexes (Mr approximately 66,000) in the carboxylated state. Analysis of the spectra enabled us to assign the major part of the proton resonances corresponding to the heme substituents. We also report assignments of proton resonances originating from 12 amino acid side chains mainly situated in the heme pocket. These results provide a basis for a comparative analysis of the tertiary heme structure in isolated beta(CO) chains in solution and in beta(CO) subunits of hemoglobin crystals. The two structures are generally similar. A significantly different position, closer to the heme center, is predicted by the NMR for Leu-141 (H19) in isolated beta chains. Comparison of the assigned resonances of conserved amino acids in alpha chains, beta chains and sperm whale myoglobin indicates a close similarity of the tertiary heme pocket structure in the three homologous proteins. Significant differences were noted on the distal heme side, at the position of Val-E11, and on Leu-H19 and Phe-G5 position on the proximal side.  相似文献   

18.
C Dalvit  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1985,24(14):3398-3407
Proton nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) measurements have been used extensively to investigate the detailed conformations of peptides, proteins, and nucleic acids in the solution state. However, much of the published work has dealth with molecules of molecular weight less than 15 000. It is generally thought that specific NOEs cannot be observed in larger molecules (due to spin diffusion), so that NOE is of little use in conformational studies of such systems. By use of truncated-driven NOE with an irradiation time of 100 ms, specific NOEs are observed in a protein of the size of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A, 65 000 daltons). This technique has permitted us to assign several proton proton resonances arising from heme groups and from amino acid residues situated in the vicinity of the ligand binding site (such as E7 histidine and E11 valine) of the alpha and beta chains of Hb A. In addition, two-dimensional 1H[1H] J-correlated spectroscopy (COSY) experiments as well as theoretical ring-current calculations have confirmed the spectral assignments obtained by the one-dimensional NOE experiments. These new results not only have permitted us to map the heme pockets and to investigate the conformational differences in the heme pockets between oxy and carbonmonoxy forms of Hb A but also have demonstrated that the technique of truncated-driven NOE can be used to investigate the detailed conformations of selected regions in larger macromolecules in a way heretofore thought not to be feasible.  相似文献   

19.
Using high resolution proton NMR spectroscopy, we have investigated 10 human hemoglobin variants modified in the proximal side of the heme pocket in beta subunits. Comparative observation of several resonances in the spectra of liganded and unliganded hemoglobins allowed us to characterize the localization and nature of the structural perturbations induced by amino acid substitutions or chemical modification. The present data indicate that the structural perturbations are localized in the beta subunits, mainly in the tertiary domain surrounding the modification site. Analysis of the aromatic region of the liganded hemoglobin spectra gives substantial information for the assignment of the His-beta 97 C-2H resonance. Correlation of the spectroscopic observations with the functional characteristics of the studied hemoglobins demonstrates that structural factors localized in the proximal side of the heme pocket can control the ligand-iron interaction taking place on the other heme side. The structural perturbations induced by the modifications in the F or FG segments of the beta subunits do not extend to the distal side but rather to the alpha 1 beta 2 interface. This argues the existence of a gradient of tertiary structural stability, indicating a possible structural pattern of heme-heme interaction in the cooperativity control.  相似文献   

20.
I Morishima  M Hara  K Ishimori 《Biochemistry》1986,25(22):7243-7250
To gain further insight into the quaternary structures of methemoglobin derivatives in the low-spin state, the interaction of fully liganded valency hybrid human hemoglobins with IHP was studied by proton NMR spectroscopy. Upon addition of IHP to (alpha CO beta + N3-)2, the same resonances as the previously reported IHP-induced NMR peaks for azidomethemoglobin (alpha + N3-beta +N3-)2 appeared, whereas the binding of IHP did not significantly affect the NMR spectra for (alpha + N3-beta CO)2. The binding of IHP also brought about more pronounced spectral changes for (alpha CO beta + Im)2 and (alpha CO beta + H2O)2 than for (alpha + Im beta CO)2 and (alpha + H2O beta CO)2. Therefore, the IHP-induced NMR peaks for azidomethemoglobin are attributed to the beta heme methyl group. Such IHP-induced beta heme methyl resonances were also observed for (alpha NO beta + N3-)2, which undergoes quaternary structural change, analogously to the R-T transition by the binding of IHP. From the above results, it was suggested that the IHP-induced heme methyl resonances for azidomethemoglobin and (alpha CO beta +N3-)2 may also be associated with the quaternary structure of these Hbs, implying the presence of the IHP-induced "T-like" state in low-spin metHb A.  相似文献   

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