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1.
The hemoglobin of the marine annelid Glycera dibranchiata possesses several unique features: the hemoglobin consists of multiple monomeric and polymeric components, quaternary structure is lacking, the distal histidine is replaced by leucine in at least one monomeric constituent, and 4) the protein exhibits extremely rapid ligand binding kinetics. The effect of these structural modifications on the ligand binding process has been evaluated using resonance Raman spectroscopy to examine the vibrational modes of the porphyrin macrocycle in deoxy and carbonmonoxy equilibrium species of hemoglobin G. dibranchiata in both the unseparated monomeric and polymeric forms and in a single monomeric component designated Fraction II. Significant differences relative to hemoglobin were found in porphyrin pi electron density, vinyl environment, low frequency vibrational modes, and, in particular, the Fe-proximal histidine stretching mode. Spectra of the deoxy heme transients generated within 10 ns of ligand photolysis have also been examined. These clearly indicate large differences in the heme pocket dynamics subsequent to CO photolysis in G. dibranchiata hemoglobins relative to other hemoglobins. The significance of these results in terms of the kinetics and thermodynamics of ligand binding is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
There is growing interest in the development of protein switches, which are proteins whose function, such as binding a target molecule, can be modulated through environmental triggers. Efforts to engineer highly pH sensitive protein–protein interactions typically rely on the rational introduction of ionizable groups in the protein interface. Such experiments are typically time intensive and often sacrifice the protein's affinity at the permissive pH. The underlying thermodynamics of proton‐linkage dictate that the presence of multiple ionizable groups, which undergo a pKa change on protein binding, are necessary to result in highly pH‐dependent binding. To test this hypothesis, a novel combinatorial histidine library was developed where every possible combination of histidine and wild‐type residue is sampled throughout the interface of a model anti‐RNase A single domain VHH antibody. Antibodies were coselected for high‐affinity binding and pH‐sensitivity using an in vitro, dual‐function selection strategy. The resulting antibodies retained near wild‐type affinity yet became highly sensitive to small decreases in pH, drastically decreasing their binding affinity, due to the incorporation of multiple histidine groups. Several trends were observed, such as histidine “hot‐spots,” which will help enhance the development of pH switch proteins as well as increase our understanding of the role of ionizable residues in protein interfaces. Overall, the combinatorial approach is rapid, general, and robust and should be capable of producing highly pH‐sensitive protein affinity reagents for a number of different applications.  相似文献   

3.
Synechocystis hemoglobin contains an unprecedented covalent bond between a nonaxial histidine side chain (H117) and the heme 2-vinyl. This bond has been previously shown to stabilize the ferric protein against denaturation, and also to affect the kinetics of cyanide association. However, it is unclear why Synechocystis hemoglobin would require the additional degree of stabilization accompanying the His117-heme 2-vinyl bond because it also displays endogenous bis-histidyl axial heme coordination, which should greatly assist heme retention. Furthermore, the mechanism by which the His117-heme 2-vinyl bond affects ligand binding has not been reported, nor has any investigation of the role of this bond on the structure and function of the protein in the ferrous oxidation state. Here we report an investigation of the role of the Synechocystis hemoglobin His117-heme 2-vinyl bond on structure, heme coordination, exogenous ligand binding, and stability in both the ferrous and ferric oxidation states. Our results reveal that hexacoordinate Synechocystis hemoglobin lacking this bond is less stable in the ferrous oxidation state than the ferric, which is surprising in light of our understanding of pentacoordinate Hb stability, in which the ferric protein is always less stable. It is also demonstrated that removal of the His117-heme 2-vinyl bond increases the affinity constant for intramolecular histidine coordination in the ferric oxidation state, thus presenting greater competition for the ligand binding site and lowering the observed rate and affinity constants for exogenous ligands.  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.
Negron C  Fufezan C  Koder RL 《Proteins》2009,74(2):400-416
Helical bundles which bind heme and porphyrin cofactors have been popular targets for cofactor-containing de novo protein design. By analyzing a highly nonredundant subset of the protein databank we have determined a rotamer distribution for helical histidines bound to heme cofactors. Analysis of the entire nonredundant database for helical sequence preferences near the ligand histidine demonstrated little preference for amino acid side chain identity, size, or charge. Analysis of the database subdivided by ligand histidine rotamer, however, reveals strong preferences in each case, and computational modeling illuminates the structural basis for some of these findings. The majority of the rotamer distribution matches that predicted by molecular simulation of a single porphyrin-bound histidine residue placed in the center of an all-alanine helix, and the deviations explain two prominent features of natural heme protein binding sites: heme distortion in the case of the cytochromes C in the m166 histidine rotamer, and a highly prevalent glycine residue in the t73 histidine rotamer. These preferences permit derivation of helical consensus sequence templates which predict optimal side chain-cofactor packing interactions for each rotamer. These findings thus promise to guide future design endeavors not only in the creation of higher affinity heme and porphyrin binding sites, but also in the direction of bound cofactor geometry.  相似文献   

6.
The homodimeric hemoglobin (HbN) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis displays an extremely high oxygen binding affinity and cooperativity. Sequence alignment with other hemoglobins suggests that the proximal F8 ligand is histidine, the distal E7 residue is leucine, and the B10 position is occupied by tyrosine. To determine how these heme pocket residues regulate the ligand binding affinities and physiological functions of HbN, we have measured the resonance Raman spectra of the O(2), CO, and OH(-) derivatives of the wild type protein and the B10 Tyr --> Leu and Phe mutants. Taken together these data demonstrate a unique distal environment in which the heme bound ligands strongly interact with the B10 tyrosine residue. The implications of these data on the physiological functions of HbN and another heme-containing protein, cytochrome c oxidase, are considered.  相似文献   

7.
A protein with multiple heme-binding sites from rabbit serum   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A 93,000 molecular weight protein (HBP.93) which binds hemin and protoporphyrin IX with high affinity has been isolated from rabbit serum using affinity chromatography on hemin-conjugated agarose. The amino acid composition of this protein is unique in that the proline and histidine contents are remarkably high (16.6 and 9.9 mol %, respectively). A large increase in the absorbance of the Soret region arises from the heme-protein interaction. The spectrophotometric titration showed that the protein can bind 25-35 mol of hemin/mol of protein. The apparent dissociation constant was estimated to be 1-4 X 10(-7) M for hemin at pH 7.4 and approximately 10(-6) M for protoporphyrin IX at pH 9.2. The similarity of the difference spectrum of heme-HBP.93 complex to that of heme-hemopexin complex suggests that a bisimidazol-type coordination of heme iron is involved in the binding. The extremely high capacity of HBP.93 to bind heme is also demonstrated by a large increase in the sedimentation velocity of the protein upon heme binding. The native heme-protein complex migrates faster than the heme-free protein in a polyacrylamide gel at pH 8.8; the increased mobility appears to be due to the charge on the carboxyl groups of the bound heme. Although the use of a hemin-agarose column has failed to reveal a protein of similar size and heme affinity in the sera of a number of other species, including man, the heme-binding properties and high histidine level of the human alpha 2-histidine-rich glycoprotein raise the possibility that the two proteins are related.  相似文献   

8.
We report a novel affinity‐based purification method for proteins expressed in Escherichia coli that uses the coordination of a heme tag to an L ‐histidine‐immobilized sepharose (HIS) resin. This approach provides an affinity purification tag visible to the eye, facilitating tracking of the protein. We show that azurin and maltose binding protein are readily purified from cell lysate using the heme tag and HIS resin. Mild conditions are used; heme‐tagged proteins are bound to the HIS resin in phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, and eluted by adding 200–500 mM imidazole or binding buffer at pH 5 or 8. The HIS resin exhibits a low level of nonspecific binding of untagged cellular proteins for the systems studied here. An additional advantage of the heme tag‐HIS method for purification is that the heme tag can be used for protein quantification by using the pyridine hemochrome absorbance method for heme concentration determination.  相似文献   

9.
BjFixL from Bradyrhizobium japonicum is a heme-based oxygen sensor implicated in the signaling cascade that enables the bacterium to adapt to fluctuating oxygen levels. Signal transduction is initiated by the binding of O(2) to the heme domain of BjFixL, resulting in protein conformational changes that are transmitted to a histidine kinase domain. We report structural changes of the heme and its binding pocket in the Fe(II) deoxy and Fe(III) met states of the wild-type BjFixLH oxygen sensor domain and four mutants of the highly conserved residue arginine 220. UV-visible, electron paramagnetic resonance, and resonance Raman spectroscopies all showed that the heme iron of the R220H mutant is unexpectedly six-coordinated at physiological pH in the Fe(III) state but undergoes pH- and redox-dependent coordination changes. This behavior is unprecedented for FixL proteins, but is reminiscent of another oxygen sensor from E. coli, EcDos. All mutants in their deoxy states are five-coordinated Fe(II), although we report rupture of the residue 220-propionate 7 interaction and structural modifications of the heme conformation as well as propionate geometry and flexibility. In this work, we conclude that part of the structural reorganization usually attributed to O(2) binding in the wild-type protein is in fact due to rupture of the Arg220-P7 interaction. Moreover, we correlate the structural modifications of the deoxy Fe(II) states with k(on) values and conclude that the Arg220-P7 interaction is responsible for the lower O(2) and CO k(on) values reported for the wild-type protein.  相似文献   

10.
The recombinant product of the hemoglobin gene of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 forms spontaneously a covalent bond linking one of the heme vinyl groups to a histidine located in the C-terminal helix (His117, or H16). The present report describes the 1H, 15N, and 13C NMR spectroscopy experiments demonstrating that the recombinant hemoglobin from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002, a protein sharing 59% identity with Synechocystis hemoglobin, undergoes the same facile heme adduct formation. The observation that the extraordinary linkage is not unique to Synechocystis hemoglobin suggests that it constitutes a noteworthy feature of hemoglobin in non-N2-fixing cyanobacteria, along with the previously documented bis-histidine coordination of the heme iron. A qualitative analysis of the hyperfine chemical shifts of the ferric proteins indicated that the cross-link had modest repercussions on axial histidine ligation and heme electronic structure. In Synechocystis hemoglobin, the unreacted His117 imidazole had a normal pK a whereas the protonation of the modified residue took place at lower pH. Optical experiments revealed that the cross-link stabilized the protein with respect to thermal and acid denaturation. Replacement of His117 with an alanine yielded a species inert to adduct formation, but inspection of the heme chemical shifts and ligand binding properties of the variant identified position 117 as important in seating the cofactor in its site and modifying the dynamic properties of the protein. A role for bis-histidine coordination and covalent adduct formation in heme retention is proposed.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at Abbreviations DQF-COSY double-quantum-filtered correlated spectroscopy - GlbN cyanoglobin - Hb hemoglobin - hx hexacoordinate - MALDI matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization - NOE nuclear Overhauser effect - NOESY two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy - rHb recombinant hemoglobin - rHb-A recombinant hemoglobin with covalently attached heme - rHb-R recombinant heme-reconstituted hemoglobin - S6803 Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 - S7002 Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 - TOCSY totally correlated two-dimensional spectroscopy - TPPI time-proportional phase incrementation - trHb truncated hemoglobin - WATERGATE water suppression by gradient-tailored excitation - WEFT water elimination Fourier transform  相似文献   

11.
High-resolution resonance Raman spectra of the ferric, ferrous, and carbonmonoxy (CO)-bound forms of wild-type Escherichia coli-expressed Pseudomonas putida cytochrome P450cam and its P420 form are reported. The ferric and ferrous species of P450 and P420 have been studied in both the presence and absence of excess camphor substrate. In ferric, camphor-bound, P450 (mos), the E. coli-expressed P450 is found to be spectroscopically indistinguishable from the native material. Although substrate binding to P450 is known to displace water molecules from the heme pocket, altering the coordination and spin state of the heme iron, the presence of camphor substrate in P420 samples is found to have essentially no effect on the Raman spectra of the heme in either the oxidized or reduced state. A detailed study of the Raman and absorption spectra of P450 and P420 reveals that the P420 heme is in equilibrium between a high-spin, five-coordinate (HS,5C) form and low-spin six-coordinate (LS,6C) form in both the ferric and ferrous oxidation states. In the ferric P420 state, H2O evidently remains as a heme ligand, while alterations of the protein tertiary structure lead to a significant reduction in affinity for Cys(357) thiolate binding to the heme iron. Ferrous P420 also consists of an equilibrium between HS,5C and LS,6C states, with the spectroscopic evidence indicating that H2O and histidine are the most likely axial ligands. The spectral characteristics of the CO complex of P420 are found to be almost identical to those of a low pH of Mb. Moreover, we find that the 10-ns transient Raman spectrum of the photolyzed P420 CO complex possesses a band at 220 cm-1, which is strong evidence in favor of histidine ligation in the CO-bound state. The equilibrium structure of ferrous P420 does not show this band, indicating that Fe-His bond formation is favored when the iron becomes more acidic upon CO binding. Raman spectra of stationary samples of the CO complex of P450 reveal VFe-CO peaks corresponding to both substrate-bound and substrate-free species and demonstrate that substrate dissociation is coupled to CO photolysis. Analysis of the relative band intensities as a function of photolysis indicates that the CO photolysis and rebinding rates are faster than camphor rebinding and that CO binds to the heme faster when camphor is not in the distal pocket.  相似文献   

12.
The proximal side of dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin A (DHP A) from Amphitrite ornata has been modified via site-directed mutagenesis of methionine 86 into aspartate (M86D) to introduce an Asp-His-Fe triad charge relay. X-ray crystallographic structure determination of the metcyano forms of M86D [Protein Data Bank (PDB) entry 3MYN ] and M86E (PDB entry 3MYM ) mutants reveal the structural origins of a stable catalytic triad in DHP A. A decrease in the rate of H(2)O(2) activation as well as a lowered reduction potential versus that of the wild-type enzyme was observed in M86D. One possible explanation for the significantly lower activity is an increased affinity for the distal histidine in binding to the heme Fe to form a bis-histidine adduct. Resonance Raman spectroscopy demonstrates a pH-dependent ligation by the distal histidine in M86D, which is indicative of an increased trans effect. At pH 5.0, the heme Fe is five-coordinate, and this structure resembles the wild-type DHP A resting state. However, at pH 7.0, the distal histidine appears to form a six-coordinate ferric bis-histidine (hemichrome) adduct. These observations can be explained by the effect of the increased positive charge on the heme Fe on the formation of a six-coordinate low-spin adduct, which inhibits the ligation and activation of H(2)O(2) as required for peroxidase activity. The results suggest that the proximal charge relay in peroxidases regulate the redox potential of the heme Fe but that the trans effect is a carefully balanced property that can both activate H(2)O(2) and attract ligation by the distal histidine. To understand the balance of forces that modulate peroxidase reactivity, we studied three M86 mutants, M86A, M86D, and M86E, by spectroelectrochemistry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of (13)C- and (15)N-labeled cyanide adducts as probes of the redox potential and of the trans effect in the heme Fe, both of which can be correlated with the proximity of negative charge to the N(δ) hydrogen of the proximal histidine, consistent with an Asp-His-Fe charge relay observed in heme peroxidases.  相似文献   

13.
J M Rifkind  L D Lauer  S C Chiang  N C Li 《Biochemistry》1976,15(24):5337-5343
Oxidation studies of hemoglobin by Cu(II) indicate that for horse hemoglobin, up to a Cu(II)/heme molar ratio of 0.5, all of the Cu(II) added is used to rapidly oxidize the heme. On the other hand, most of the Cu(II) added to human hemoglobin at low Cu(II)/heme molar ratios is unable to oxidize the heme. Only at Cu(II)/heme molar ratios greater than 0.5 does the amount of oxidation per added Cu(II) approach that of horse hemoglobin. At the same time, binding studies indicate that human hemoglobin has an additional binding site involving one copper for every two hemes, which has a higher copper affinity than the single horse hemoglobin binding site. The Cu(II) oxidation of human hemoglobin is explained utilizing this additional binding site by a mechanism where a transfer of electrons cannot occur between the heme and the Cu(II) bound to the high affinity human binding site. The electron transfer must involve the Cu(II) bound to the lower affinity human hemoglobin binding site, which is similar to the only horse hemoglobin site. The involvement of beta-2 histidine in the binding of this additional copper is indicated by a comparison of the amino acid sequences of various hemoglobins which possess the additional site, with the amino acid sequences of hemoglobins which do not possess the additional site. Zn(II), Hg(II), and N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) are found to decrease the Cu(II) oxidation of hemoglobin. The sulfhydryl reagents, Hg(II) and NEM, produce a very dramatic decrease in the rate of oxidation, which can only be explained by an effect on the rate for the actual transfer of electrons between the Cu(II) and the Fe(II). The effect of Zn(II) is much smaller and can, for the most part, be explained by the increased oxygen affinity, which affects the ligand dissociation process that must precede the electron transfer process.  相似文献   

14.
Autoxidation and chemically-induced oxidation of hemoglobin Zurich (beta 63 E7 Arg) have been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance and optical absorption spectroscopy. The results show that the replacement of the distal histidine of the hemoglobin beta chains by an arginine greatly enhances the susceptibility of the heme-iron to oxidative challenge. Both the kinetics and the products of the oxidation are pH dependent. Thus, at acidic and neutral pH, treatment of the protein with ferricyanide leads to a fast conversion of the oxy-protein to aquo-methemoglobin, which, eventually, is slowly converted to hemichromes. In contrast, the hydroxy-met derivative, formed upon chemical oxidation at high pH, is rapidly converted to hemichromes. The electron paramagnetic resonance features of the ferric derivatives of hemoglobin Zurich are somewhat singular, reflecting the modifications of the heme environment in the distal region of the abnormal chains. However, they can be related to heme complexes having their structural counterparts in oxidation products of hemoglobin A.  相似文献   

15.
Resonance Raman scattering studies are reported on freshly prepared and aged ferric, ligand-free ferrous, and CO-bound ferrous cytochrome c peroxidase. The ferric form of the fresh enzyme has a heme which is penta-coordinate high spin, independent of buffer over the pH range 4.3-7, as determined by well established Raman marker lines. The aged enzyme displays a mixture of spin and coordination states, but it can be stabilized in the penta-coordinate high spin form in the presence of phosphate. These results can be accounted for by considering the size of the channel (6 A wide, 11 A long) between the distal side of the heme and the outer surface of the protein. A phosphate ion may be accommodated in this channel resulting in the stabilization of the distal heme pocket. The ferrous cytochrome c peroxidase in both the ligand-free and CO-bound states has an acidic and an alkaline form. The acidic form has the characteristic spectral features of peroxidases: a high frequency iron-histidine stretching mode (248 cm-1), a high frequency Fe-CO stretching mode (537 cm-1), and a low frequency C-O stretching mode (1922 cm-1). At alkaline pH these frequencies become similar to those of hemoglobin and myoglobin, with the corresponding modes located at 227, 510, and 1948 cm-1, respectively. We attribute the acid/alkaline transition in the ferrous forms of cytochrome c peroxidase to a rearrangement mainly of the proximal side of the heme, culminating in a change of steric interactions between the proximal histidine and the heme or of the hydrogen bonding network involving the proximal histidine. The new data presented here reconcile many inconsistencies reported in the past.  相似文献   

16.
The hemoglobins of the Sea Lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) exist in an equilibrium between low affinity oligomers, stabilized by proton binding, and higher affinity monomers, stabilized by oxygen binding. Recent crystallographic analysis revealed that dimerization is coupled with key changes at the ligand binding site with the distal histidine sterically restricting ligand binding in the deoxy dimer but with no significant structural rearrangements on the proximal side. These structural insights led to the hypothesis that oxygen affinity of lamprey hemoglobin is distally regulated. Here we present the 2.9-A crystal structure of deoxygenated lamprey hemoglobin in an orthorhombic crystal form along with the structure of these crystals exposed to carbon monoxide. The hexameric assemblage in this crystal form is very similar to those observed in the previous deoxy structure. Whereas the hydrogen bonding network and packing contacts formed in the dimeric interface of lamprey hemoglobin are largely unaffected by ligand binding, the binding of carbon monoxide induces the distal histidine to swing to positions that would preclude the formation of a stabilizing hydrogen bond with the bound ligand. These results suggest a dual role for the distal histidine and strongly support the hypothesis that ligand affinity in lamprey hemoglobin is distally regulated.  相似文献   

17.
The truncated hemoglobin (Hb) from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is a bis-histidyl hexacoordinate complex in the absence of exogenous ligands. This protein can form a covalent cross-link between His117 in the H-helix and the heme 2-vinyl group. Cross-linking, the physiological importance of which has not been established, is avoided with the His117Ala substitution. In the present work, H117A Hb was used to explore exogenous ligand binding to the heme group. NMR and thermal denaturation data showed that the replacement was of little consequence to the structural and thermodynamic properties of ferric Synechocystis Hb. It did, however, decelerate the association of cyanide ions with the heme iron. Full complexation required hours, instead of minutes, of incubation at optical and NMR concentrations. At neutral pH and in the presence of excess cyanide, binding occurred with a first-order dependence on cyanide concentration, eliminating distal histidine decoordination as the rate-limiting step. The cyanide complex of the H117A variant was characterized for the conformational changes occurring as the histidine on the distal side, His46 (E10), was displaced. Extensive rearrangement allowed Tyr22 (B10) to insert in the heme pocket and Gln43 (E7) and Gln47 (E11) to come in contact with it. H-bond formation to the bound cyanide was identified in solution with the use of (1)H(2)O/(2)H(2)O mixtures. Cyanide binding also resulted in a change in the ratio of heme orientational isomers, in a likely manifestation of heme environment reshaping. Similar observations were made with the related Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 H117A Hb, except that cyanide binding was rapid in this protein. In both cases, the (15)N chemical shift of bound cyanide was reminiscent of that in peroxidases and the orientation of the proximal histidine was as in other truncated Hbs. The ensemble of the data provided insight into the structural cooperativity of the heme pocket scaffold and pointed to the reactive 117 site of Synechocystis Hb as a potential determinant of biophysical and, perhaps, functional properties.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Molecular dynamics simulations, low temperature visible absorption spectroscopy, and resonance Raman spectroscopy have been performed on a mutant of the Scapharca inaequivalvis homodimeric hemoglobin, where residue threonine 72, at the subunit interface, has been substituted by isoleucine. Molecular dynamics simulation indicates that in the Thr-72-->Ile mutant several residues that have been shown to play a role in ligand binding fluctuate around orientations and distances similar to those observed in the x-ray structure of the CO derivative of the native hemoglobin, although the overall structure remains in the T state. Visible absorption spectroscopy data indicate that in the deoxy form the Soret band is less asymmetric in the mutant than in the native protein, suggesting a more planar heme structure; moreover, these data suggest a similar heme-solvent interaction in both the liganded and unliganded states of the mutant protein, at variance with that observed in the native protein. The "conformation sensitive" band III of the deoxy mutant protein is shifted to lower energy by >100 cm-1 with respect to the native one, about one-half of that observed in the low temperature photoproducts of both proteins, indicating a less polar or more hydrophobic heme environment. Resonance Raman spectroscopy data show a slight shift of the iron-proximal histidine stretching mode of the deoxy mutant toward lower frequency with respect to the native protein, which can be interpreted in terms of either a change in packing of the phenyl ring of Phe-97, as also observed from the simulation, or a loss of water in the heme pocket. In line with this latter interpretation, the number of water molecules that dynamically enters the intersubunit interface, as calculated by the molecular dynamics simulation, is lower in the mutant than in the native protein. The 10-ns photoproduct for the carbonmonoxy mutant derivative has a higher iron-proximal histidine stretching frequency than does the native protein. This suggests a subnanosecond relaxation that is slowed in the mutant, consistent with a stabilization of the R structure. Taken together, the molecular dynamics and the spectroscopic data indicate that the higher oxygen affinity displayed by the Thr-72-->Ile mutant is mainly due to a local perturbation in the dimer interface that propagates to the heme region, perturbing the polarity of the heme environment and propionate interactions. These changes are consistent with a destabilization of the T state and a stabilization of the R state in the mutant relative to the native protein.  相似文献   

20.
The unique feature of this model is that both the fractional saturation and the free energy change are handled within the framework of the tension-displacement mechanism for hemoglobin co-operativity proposed by Perutz (1970, 1972), i.e. heme iron movement and associated changes in the protein globin internal tension, tau. Physically, tau is the force applied by the protein globin on the proximal histidine, preventing the iron stereochemistry from attaining the geometry preferred in the bound state. It is assumed that a change in position of the heme iron on ligand binding displaces the protein globin proportionately, thereby decreasing tau at neighboring sites; the resulting energy change is assumed to be delocalized throughout the flexible protein globin rather than localized at the heme group per se. The physical interpretation of the model parameters has important implications with regard to data analysis: first, structural data is used to fix the molecular displacements lt and lr; second, jt/jr provides a measure of the protein's intrinsic (i.e. tau = 0) affinity for the bound ligand, and third the set [Ei] is a property of the hemoglobin molecule only and can be determined, in principle, using structural data and optical absorption spectra. The calculated protein globin internal tension in the tense, unbound state (approximately 2 X 10(-5) dyne), determined from the fractional saturation data of Joels & Pugh (1958), is very similar (approximately 3.2 X 10(-5) dyne) to the value estimated by Hopfield (1973) from free energy considerations.  相似文献   

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