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1.
Plants often face hypoxic stress as a result of flooding and waterlogged soils. During these periods, they must continue ATP production and nitrogen metabolism if they are to survive. The normal pathway of reductive nitrogen assimilation in non-legumes, nitrate, and nitrite reductase can be inhibited during low oxygen conditions that are associated with the buildup of toxic metabolites such as nitrite and nitric oxide, so the plant must also have a means of detoxifying these molecules. Compared to animal hemoglobins, plant and cyanobacterial hemoglobins are adept at reducing nitrite to nitric oxide under anaerobic conditions. Here we test their abilities to reduce hydroxylamine, a proposed intermediate of nitrite reductase, under anaerobic conditions. We find that class 1 rice nonsymbiotic hemoglobin (rice nsHb1) and the hemoglobin from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis (SynHb) catalyze the reduction of hydroxylamine to ammonium at rates 100-2500 times faster than animal hemoglobins including myoglobin, neuroglobin, cytoglobin, and blood cell hemoglobin. These results support the hypothesis that plant and cyanobacterial hemoglobins contribute to anaerobic nitrogen metabolism in support of anaerobic respiration and survival during hypoxia.  相似文献   

2.
Lui FE  Dong P  Kluger R 《Biochemistry》2008,47(40):10773-10780
Although stabilized hemoglobins have been evaluated as oxygen-carrying replacements for red cells in transfusions, in vivo evaluations have noted that these materials are associated with vasoactivity, a serious complication. Scavenging of endogenous nitric oxide by the deoxyheme sites of the stabilized proteins is one likely source of vasoactivity. Recent reports indicate that modification of cell-free hemoglobin derivatives with multiple chains of polyethylene glycol (PEG) suppresses vasoactivity. Gladwin and co-workers observed that the nitrite reductase activity of hemoglobin serves as a major endogenous source of nitric oxide. If PEG conjugation leads to enhanced nitrite reductase activity, this could compensate for scavenged endogenous nitric oxide. To test this possibility, the rates of conversion of nitrite ion to nitric oxide by altered hemoglobins with and without PEG were measured at 25 degrees C. Fumaryl (alpha99-alpha99) cross-linked hemoglobin reacts with nitrite with a bimolecular rate constant of 0.52 M (-1) s (-1), which is comparable to that associated with native hemoglobin (0.25 M (-1) s (-1)). Addition of PEG chains to the cross-linked hemoglobin at beta-Cys93 (alphaalpha-Hb-PEG5K 2) results in a material that produces nitric oxide much more rapidly ( k = 1.41 M (-1) s (-1)). R-State-stabilized hemoglobins with multiple PEG chains (Hb-PEG5K 2 and Hb-PEG5K 6) react 10 times faster with nitrite to produce nitric oxide than does native hemoglobin ( k = 2.5 and 2.4 M (-1) s (-1), respectively). These results, showing enhanced production of nitric oxide resulting from an increased proportion of the protein residing in the R-state, are consistent with the decrease in vasoactivity associated with PEG conjugation.  相似文献   

3.
Bacterial hemoglobins and flavohemoglobins share a common globin fold but differ otherwise in structural and functional aspects. The bases of these differences were investigated through kinetic studies on oxygen, carbon monoxide, and nitric oxide binding. The novel bacterial hemoglobins from Clostridium perfringens and Campylobacter jejuni and the flavohemoglobins from Bacillus subtilis and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi have been analyzed. Examination of the biochemical and ligand binding properties of these proteins shows a clear distinction between the two groups. Flavohemoglobins show a much greater tendency to autoxidation compared to bacterial hemoglobins. The differences in affinity for oxygen, carbon monoxide, and nitric oxide between bacterial hemoglobins and flavohemoglobins are mainly due to differences in the association rate constants. The second-order rate constants for oxygen and carbon monoxide binding to bacterial hemoglobins are severalfold higher than those for flavohemoglobins. A similar trend is observed for NO association with the oxidized iron(III) form of the proteins. No major differences are observed among the values obtained for the dissociation rate constants for the two groups of bacterial proteins studied, and these constants are all rather similar to those for myoglobin. Taken together, our data suggest that differences exist between the mechanisms of ligand binding to bacterial hemoglobins and flavohemoglobins, suggesting different functions in the cell.  相似文献   

4.
Through its cooperative binding mechanism, hemoglobin is an effective transporter of oxygen and carbon dioxide. Although data have recently been presented suggesting otherwise, the rate at which nitric oxide binds to hemoglobin is not cooperative. On the other hand, the rate at which nitric oxide dissociates from hemoglobin is cooperative so that, similar to the case of oxygen, the cooperativity in equilibrium ligand binding is manifested in the dissociation rate rather than the association rate. Two general factors that diminish the likelihood that hemoglobin transports nitric oxide are the slow dissociation rate of nitric oxide from hemoglobin and the very fast hemoglobin oxidation reaction, which converts nitric oxide to the inert molecule nitrate. Despite these factors the possibility that NO is delivered by hemoglobin under certain conditions or through more complicated mechanisms needs further study.  相似文献   

5.
The five principal components of human hemoglobin (Ala, Alb, Alc, Ao, and A2) have been isolated by column chromatography and by preparative isoelectric focusing in gels. The isoelectric points and a number of kinetic parameters have been determined for each hemoglobin. The greatest kinetic differences are found in the binding of CO to the deoxy conformation. At pH 7, A0 and A2 are nearly identical in their overall reaction with CO, whereas the initial lag phase characteristic of crude hemolysate and A0 is greatly reduced in Ala and Alc and is essentially absent in Alb. The general effect of p-mercuribenzoate bindind on CO association is to magnify kinetic differences among the hemoglobins, diminish the initial lag phase, and increase the overall rate of CO binding. Hemoglobin Ala is anomalous in that the overall CO binding rate actually decreases after reaction with the mercurial. In terms of an Adair model with four association constants the rate constant for the binding of the first molecule of CO (1l') showed the greatest variation among the five hemoglobins, with A0 having the smallest constant, and Alb the largest. For the native hemoglobins, 1l' for Alb was more than twice that for A0; for the mercurated hemoglobins, the difference was greater than threefold. Raising the pH form 7 to 8 increases 1l' for all hemoglobins, but Ala is anomalous in having a slower overall rate for CO binding at the higher pH. At pH 9, the time course of CO binding is biphasic for all hemoglobins, with A0, the fastest, and Ala, the slowest, differing by nearly threefold in rate. The equilibrium constant for the tetramer-dimer equilibrium was determined by flash photolysis. The largest dissociation constant occurs for Ala and is 4.4 times that for A0, and 5.6 times that for Alc, the least dissociated of the hemoglobins. The overall oxygen dissociation reaction is biphasic for Ala and Alb, with the two phases differing by a factor of 5; the dissociation reactions for the other three hemoglobins appear essentially monophasic. The kinetics of dissociation of the first oxygen molecule from oxyhemoglobin are very similar for all five hemoglobins, as are the association kinetics for CN-minus and N3-minus binding to the five methemoglobins.  相似文献   

6.
In response to oxygen limitation or oxidative and nitrosative stress, bacteria express three kinds of hemoglobin proteins: truncated hemoglobins (tr Hbs), hemoglobins (Hbs) and flavohemoglobins (flavo Hbs). The two latter groups share a high sequence homology and structural similarity in their globin domain. Flavohemoglobin proteins contain an additional reductase domain at their C-terminus and their expression is induced in the presence of reactive nitrogen and oxygen species. Flavohemoglobins detoxify NO in an aerobic process, termed nitric oxide dioxygenase reaction, which protects the host from various noxious nitrogen compounds. Only a small number of bacteria express hemoglobin proteins and the best studied of these is from Vitreoscilla sp. Vitreoscilla hemoglobin (VHb) has been expressed in various heterologous hosts under oxygen-limited conditions and has been shown to improve growth and productivity, rendering the protein interesting for biotechnology industry. The close interaction of VHb with the terminal oxidases has been shown and this interplay has been proposed to enhance respiratory activity and energy production by delivering oxygen, the ultimate result being an improvement in growth properties.  相似文献   

7.
Plant hemoglobins constitute a diverse group of hemeproteins and evolutionarily belong to three different classes. Class 1 hemoglobins possess an extremely high affinity to oxygen and their main function consists in scavenging of nitric oxide (NO) at very low oxygen levels. Class 2 hemoglobins have a lower oxygen affinity and they facilitate oxygen supply to developing tissues. Symbiotic hemoglobins in nodules have mostly evolved from class 2 hemoglobins. Class 3 hemoglobins are truncated and represent a clade with a very low similarity to class 1 and 2 hemoglobins. They may regulate oxygen delivery at high O2 concentrations. Depending on their physical properties, hemoglobins belong either to hexacoordinate non-symbiotic or pentacoordinate symbiotic groups. Plant hemoglobins are plausible targets for improving resistance to multiple stresses.  相似文献   

8.
It is well known that nitric oxide (NO), the most important vasodilator agent, plays an important role in lowering vascular resistance in the human umbilical-placental circulation and that its deficiency is related to the pathogenesis of pre-eclamptic disorder. Besides it has recently been demonstrated that human hemoglobin (HbA) is able to transport nitric oxide, as S-nitrosohemoglobin (SNO-Hb), from the arterial to the venous blood. In the present study we examine the functional properties of the adult and fetal nitrosated hemoglobins to see if the double transport of oxygen and NO may influence the fetal oxygenation and the relation between maternal and fetal blood. Our results show that S-nitrosation significantly increases the oxygen affinity of the adult Hb (HbA) with respect to native protein (no-nitrosated) while the functional properties of HbF are less influenced. The oxygen affinity modification, found for SNO-HbA, was ascribed to the nitrosation of cysteine beta 93: really, the same residue is also present in the gamma chains of fetal hemoglobin, while the increase of affinity is less evidenced; hence, it is probable that the 39 aminoacidic substitutions between beta and gamma chains allay the effects of S-nitrosation. As regards the physiological modulators (protons, chloride ions, 2,3-diphosphoglyceric acid, and temperature), they influence the oxygen affinity of the two hemoglobins S-nitrosated, in equal mode with respect to the native forms determining the same variation on the oxygen affinity. Hence, our results evidence the fact that the NO release by SNO-HbA "in vivo" would be limited to regions of extremely low oxygen tension (such as hypoxic regions), while in fetus, SNO-HbF would unload nitric oxide and oxygen at pressure values close to normal.  相似文献   

9.
Three types of hemoglobins exist in higher plants, symbiotic, non-symbiotic, and truncated hemoglobins. Symbiotic (class II) hemoglobins play a role in oxygen supply to intracellular nitrogen-fixing symbionts in legume root nodules, and in one case ( Parasponia Sp.), a non-symbiotic (class I) hemoglobin has been recruited for this function. Here we report the induction of a host gene, dgtrHB1, encoding a truncated hemoglobin in Frankia-induced nodules of the actinorhizal plant Datisca glomerata. Induction takes place specifically in cells infected by the microsymbiont, prior to the onset of bacterial nitrogen fixation. A bacterial gene (Frankia trHBO) encoding a truncated hemoglobin with O (2)-binding kinetics suitable for the facilitation of O (2) diffusion ( ) is also expressed in symbiosis. Nodule oximetry confirms the presence of a molecule that binds oxygen reversibly in D. glomerata nodules, but indicates a low overall hemoglobin concentration suggesting a local function. Frankia trHbO is likely to be responsible for this activity. The function of the D. glomerata truncated hemoglobin is unknown; a possible role in nitric oxide detoxification is suggested.  相似文献   

10.
The alpha and beta subunits in Fe-Co hybrid hemoglobins differ in their rapid reactions with dioxygen and nitric oxide after dissociation by a 25-ns photoflash. The alpha subunits show little recombination on a scale of tens of nanoseconds, whereas the beta subunits show extensive recombination on this time sale. The alpha-beta difference is more marked with Fe than with Co and greater with dioxygen as ligand than with nitric oxide, but is clearly evident in all combinations of ligand and metal. Addition of inositol hexaphosphate slows ligand binding and reduces the proportion of rapid recombination of dioxygen and nitric oxide to beta-Fe subunits. The behavior of alpha-Fe subunits is unaffected by this compound. These results permit the beta subunit to be identified as the T-state species which equilibrates rapidly with oxygen in the T-state, i.e. the reverse of the identification suggested on structural grounds.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of inositol hexakisphosphate (IHP) on the spectroscopic (EPR and absorbance) properties of the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse and bovine hemoglobin (Hb) has been investigated. In the absence of IHP, the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse Hb shows spectroscopic properties similar to those of the corresponding derivative of ferrous human Hb that are generally taken as typical of the high affinity state of tetrametric hemoproteins. Similar to human Hb, the addition of IHP to the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse Hb induces a transition toward a species characterized by spectral properties typical of the low affinity state of hemoglobins. Nevertheless, the equilibrium constant for IHP binding to the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse Hb (= 1.5 x 10(2) M-1) is much lower than that reported for the association of the polyphosphate to the same derivative of ferrous human Hb (greater than 3 x 10(5) M-1). Conversely, the spectroscopic properties of the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous bovine Hb are characteristic of the low affinity state of tetrameric hemoproteins, both in the absence and in the presence of IHP. These results, taken together with the behavior of the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous human Hb, provide further evidence for the peculiar oxygen binding properties of horse and bovine Hb.  相似文献   

12.
Neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) is activated by the Ca(2+)-dependent binding of calmodulin (CaM) to a characteristic polypeptide linker connecting the oxygenase and reductase domains. Calmodulin binding also activates the reductase domain of the enzyme, increasing the rate of reduction of external electron acceptors such as cytochrome c. Several unusual structural features appear to control this activation mechanism, including an autoinhibitory loop, a C-terminal extension, and kinase-dependent phosphorylation sites. Pre-steady state reduction and oxidation time courses for the nNOS reductase domain indicate that CaM binding triggers NADP(+) release, which may exert control over steady-state turnover. In addition, the second order rate constant for cytochrome c reduction in the absence of CaM was found to be highly dependent on the presence of NADPH. It appears that NADPH induces a conformational change in the nNOS reductase domain, restricting access to the FMN by external electron acceptors. CaM binding reverses this effect, causing a 30-fold increase in the second order rate constant. The results show a startling interplay between the two ligands, which both exert control over the conformation of the domain to influence its electron transfer properties. In the full-length enzyme, NADPH binding will probably close the conformational lock in vivo, preventing electron transfer to the oxygenase domain and the resultant stimulation of nitric oxide synthesis.  相似文献   

13.
The spin-labeled tryptophan (TrpSL) was used as a structural probe of hemoglobin (Hb) contact sites. The electron paramagnetic resonance spectral data indicated that the probe exhibits weak binding to Hb with a dissociation constant of 3.2 x 10(-5) and 4.0 mol bound per Hb tetramer. The spectrum suggested that the bound tryptophan was 'partially immobilized' with a correlation time reflecting the environment of the tryptophan binding site of 8.5 s. The topology of the contact sites was investigated by using a dual spin label methodology in which TrpSL and 2H-15N covalently bound to B 93 cysteine residue were used. The electron spin resonance spectral data suggested that the tryptophan binding sites were located within 8-10 A of the nitroxide free radical of spin-labeled Hb. The environment of the contact sites is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Chemical modifications, NES-Cys(beta 93), des-Arg(alpha 141), and both modifications on the same molecule, were made to Ni-Fe hybrid hemoglobins, and their effect on individual subunits was investigated by measuring oxygen equilibrium curves, the Fe(II)-N epsilon (His F8) stretching Raman lines, and light-absorption spectra. The oxygen equilibrium properties indicated that modified Ni-Fe hybrid hemoglobins remain good models for the corresponding deoxy ferrous hemoglobins, although K1, the dissociation equilibrium constant for the first oxygen to bind to hemoglobin, was decreased by the chemical modifications. Resonance Raman spectra of deoxy alpha 2 (Fe) beta 2 (Ni) and light-absorption spectra of deoxy alpha 2 (Ni) beta 2 (Fe), revealed that the state of alpha hemes in both hybrid hemoglobins underwent a transition from a deoxy-like state to an oxy-like state caused by these chemical modifications when K1 was about 3 mm Hg (1 mm Hg approximately 133.3 Pa). On the other hand, the state of beta hemes in hybrid hemoglobins was little affected, when K1 was larger than 1 mm Hg. Modified alpha 2 (Fe) beta 2 (Ni) gave a Hill coefficient greater than unity with a maximum of 1.4 when K1 was about 4 mm Hg. The two-state model predicts that the K1 value at the maximum Hill coefficient should be much larger than this value. For oxygen binding to unmodified alpha 2 (Ni) beta 2 (Fe), oxygen equilibrium data suggested no structural change, while the spectral data showed a structural change around Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX in the alpha subunits. A similar situation was encountered with modified alpha 2 (Ni) beta 2 (Fe), although K1 was decreased as a result of the structural changes induced by the modifications.  相似文献   

15.
The oxygenation of hemoglobins is accompanied by the dissociation of protons. The number of protons discharged is inversely related to the size of the mammal from which the hemoglobin comes. The number of mercuric ions which are immediately bound by hemoglobins is approximately equal to the number of protons dissociated during oxygenation. Pretreatment of human hemoglobin by N-ethylmaleimide, which appears to bind only sulfhydryl groups prevents the binding of any mercuric ions under conditions when mercuric ions would otherwise be bound. These facts suggest that those mammals with higher metabolic rates will generally possess hemoglobins with a larger number of appropriately placed cysteine residues.  相似文献   

16.
The heme prosthetic group in hemoglobins is most often attached to the globin through coordination of either one or two histidine side chains. Those proteins with one histidine coordinating the heme iron are called "pentacoordinate" hemoglobins, a group represented by red blood cell hemoglobin and most other oxygen transporters. Those with two histidines are called "hexacoordinate hemoglobins", which have broad representation among eukaryotes. Coordination of the second histidine in hexacoordinate Hbs is reversible, allowing for binding of exogenous ligands like oxygen, carbon monoxide, and nitric oxide. Research over the past several years has produced a fairly detailed picture of the structure and biochemistry of hexacoordinate hemoglobins from several species including neuroglobin and cytoglobin in animals, and the nonsymbiotic hemoglobins in plants. However, a clear understanding of the physiological functions of these proteins remains an elusive goal.  相似文献   

17.
The relative affinity of diphosphoglycerate and ATP for hemoglobin dimers and tetramers can be measured under conditions where the protein is in large molar excess over the polyphosphate. Binding of both compounds to dimers was about 25 times stronger than to tetramers in the case of the three low-spin hemoglobins, oxyhemoglobin, carboxyhemoglobin and cyanomethemoglobin. The mutation in hemoglobin Kansas leads to an increased dissociation into alpha beta dimers. The increase in diphosphoglycerate binding by this hemoglobin was in good agreement with that expected from the dimer-tetramer dissociation constant over a wide range of hemoglobin concentrations. In contrast to the liganded hemoglobins, both deoxyhemoglobin and aquomethemoglobin bind the two polyanions as tetramers.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of 2,3 diphosphoglyceric acid (2,3-DPG), adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) on the oxygen affinity of whole “stripped” hemoglobin (WSH), hemoglobin H (Hb-H), hemoglobin A (Hb-A) and hemoglobin D (Hb-D) isolated from 18-day chick embryo blood have been determined. The effect of the three organic phosphates upon the oxygen dissociation curves is similar and the following order of decreasing oxygen affinity of the organic phosphates was observed for each hemoglobin: 2,3-DPG < ATP < IHP. 2,3-DPG appears to have a slightly greater effect upon the P50 of Hb-H than upon that of either of the two adult-type hemoglobins. However, this effect seems insufficient to suggest a preferential interaction of 2,3-DPG with Hb-H which would account for either the large amounts of 2,3-DPG in the erythrocytes of embryos or the higher oxygen affinity of the whole blood. The effects of the organic phosphates upon the Hill constant of the purified hemoglobins are variable. It is concluded that since the distribution of hemoglobins H, A, and D in the erythrocytes during the developmental period from 18-day embryos to 6-day chicks remains fairly constant, the previously described progressive decrease in oxygen affinity of the whole blood during this period results from changes in the total amount and distribution of the intraerythrocytic organic phosphates.2  相似文献   

19.
The dissociation of nitric oxide from hemoglobin, from isolated subunits of hemoglobin, and from myoglobin has been studied using dithionite to remove free nitric oxide. The reduction of nitric oxide by dithionite has a rate of 1.4 X 10(3) M-1 S-1 at 20 degrees in 0.05 M phosphate, pH 7.0, which is small compared with the rate of recombination of hemoglobin with nitric oxide (25 X 10(6) M-1 S-1 (Cassoly, R., and Gibson, Q. H. (1975) J. Mol. Biol. 91, 301-313). The rate of NO combination with chains and myoglobin was found to be 24 X 10(6) M-1 S-1 and 17 X 10(6) M-1 S-1, respectively. Hence, the observed progress curve of the dissociation of nitric oxide is dependent upon the dithionite concentration and the total heme concentration. Addition of excess carbon monoxide to the dissociation mixture reduces the free heme yielding a single exponential process for chains and for myoglobin which is dithionite and heme concentration independent over a wide range of concentrations. The rates of dissociation of nitric oxide from alpha chains, from beta chains, and from myoglobin are 4.6 X 10(-5) S-1, 2.2 X 10(-5) S-1, and 1.2 X 10(4) S-1, respectively, both in the presence and in the absence of carbon monoxide at 20 degrees in 0.05 M phosphate, pH 7.0. Analogous heme and dithionite concentration dependence is found for the dissociation of nitric oxide from tetrameric hemoglobin. The reaction is cooperative, the intrinsic rate constants for the dissociation of the 1st and 4th molecules of NO differing about 100-fold. With hemoglobin, replacement of NO by CO at neutral pH is biphasic in phosphate buffers. The rate of the slow phase is 1 X 10(-5) S-1 and is independent of pH. The amplitude of the fast phase increases with lowering of pH. By analogy with the treatment of the HbCO + NO reaction given by Salhany et al. (Salhany, J.M., Ogawa, S., and Shulman, R.G. (1975) Biochemistry 14, 2180-2190), the fast phase is attributed to the dissociation of NO from T state molecules and the slow phase to dissociation from R state molecules. Analysis of the data gives a pH-independent value of 0.01 for the allosteric constant c (c = Kr/Kt where Kr and Kt are the dissociation constants for NO from the R and T states, respectively) and pH-dependent values of L (2.5 X 10(7) at pH 7 in 0.05 M phosphate buffer). The value of c is considerably greater than that for O2 and CO. Studies of the difference spectrum induced in the Soret region by inositol hexaphosphate are also reported. This spectrum does not arise directly from the change of conformation between R and T states. The results show that if the equilibrium binding curve for NO could be determined experimentally, it would show cooperativity with Hill's n at 50% saturation of about 1.6.  相似文献   

20.
Halder P  Trent JT  Hargrove MS 《Proteins》2007,66(1):172-182
Present in most organisms, hexacoordinate hemoglobins (hxHbs) are proteins that have evolved the capacity for reversible bis-histidyl heme coordination. The heme prosthetic group enables diverse protein functionality, such as electron transfer, redox reactions, ligand transport, and enzymatic catalysis. The reactivity of heme is greatly effected by the coordination and noncovalent chemical environment imposed by its connate protein. Of considerable interest is how the hxHb globin fold achieves reversible intramolecular coordination while still enabling high-affinity binding of oxygen, nitric oxide, and other small ligands. Here we explore this question by examining the role of the protein matrix on coordination behavior in a group of hxHbs from animals, plants, and bacteria, including human neuroglobin and cytoglobin, a nonsymbiotic hemoglobin from rice, and a truncated hemoglobin from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis. This is done with a set of experiments measuring the reduction potentials of each wild-type hxHb and its corresponding mutant protein where the reversibly bound histidine (the distal His) has been replaced with a noncoordinating side chain. These reduction potentials, coupled with studies of the mutant proteins saturated with exogenous imidazole, enable us to assess the effects of the protein matrices on histidine coordination. Our results show significant variation among the hxHbs, demonstrating flexibility in the globin moiety's ability to regulate reversible coordination. This regulation is particularly evident in the plant nonsymbiotic hemoglobins, where ferric state histidine coordination affinity is substantially lowered by the protein matrix.  相似文献   

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