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1.
The human myoglobin (Mb) sequence is similar to other mammalian Mb sequences, except for a unique cysteine at position 110. Reaction of wild-type recombinant human Mb, the C110A variant of human Mb, or horse heart Mb with H(2)O(2) (protein/H(2)O(2) = 1:1.2 mol/mol) resulted in formation of tryptophan peroxyl (Trp-OO( small middle dot)) and tyrosine phenoxyl radicals as detected by EPR spectroscopy at 77 K. For wild-type human Mb, a second radical (g approximately 2. 036) was detected after decay of Trp-OO( small middle dot) that was not observed for the C110A variant or horse heart Mb. When the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) was included in the reaction mixture at protein/DMPO ratios /=1:25 mol/mol, DMPO-tyrosyl radical adducts were detected. Mass spectrometry of wild-type human Mb following reaction with H(2)O(2) demonstrated the formation of a homodimer (mass of 34,107 +/- 5 atomic mass units) sensitive to reducing conditions. The human Mb C110A variant afforded no dimer under identical conditions. Together, these data indicate that reaction of wild-type human Mb and H(2)O(2) differs from the corresponding reaction of other myoglobin species by formation of thiyl radicals that lead to a homodimer through intermolecular disulfide bond formation.  相似文献   

2.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a heterodimeric hemoprotein that catalyzes the conversion of GTP to cGMP. Upon binding NO to its heme cofactor, purified sGC was activated 300-fold. sGC was only activated 67-fold by nitroglycerin (GTN) and Cys; and in the absence of Cys, GTN did not activate sGC. Electronic absorption spectroscopy studies showed that upon NO binding, the Soret of ferrous sGC shifted from 431 to 399 nm. The data also revealed that activation of sGC by GTN/Cys was not via the expected ferrous heme-NO species as indicated by the absence of the 399 nm heme Soret. Furthermore, EPR studies of the reaction of GTN/Cys with sGC confirmed that no ferrous heme-NO species was formed but that there was heme oxidation. Potassium ferricyanide is known to oxidize ferrous sGC to the ferric oxidation state. Spectroscopic and activity data for the reactions of sGC with GTN alone or with K(3)Fe(CN)(6) were indistinguishable. These data suggest the following: 1) GTN/Cys do not activate sGC via GTN biotransformation to NO in vitro, and 2) in the absence of added thiol, GTN oxidizes sGC.  相似文献   

3.
Myeloperoxidase catalyzes the reaction of chloride ions with H2O2 to yield hypochlorous acid (HOCl), which can damage proteins. Human myoglobin (HMb) differs from other Mbs by the presence of a cysteine residue at position 110 (Cys110). This study has (i) compared wild-type and a Cys110Ala variant of HMb to assess the influence of Cys110 on HOCl-induced amino acid modification and (ii) determined whether HOCl oxidation of HMb affects the rate of ferric heme reduction by cytochrome b5. For wild-type HMb (HOCl:Mb ratio of 5:1 mol:mol), Cys110 was preferentially oxidized to a homodimeric or cysteic acid product—sulfenic/sulfinic acids were not detected. At a HOCl:Mb ratio 10:1 mol:mol, methionine (Met) oxidation was detected, and this was enhanced in the Cys110Ala variant. Tryptophan (Trp) oxidation was detected only in the Cys110Ala variant at the highest HOCl dose tested, with oxidation susceptibility following the order Cys > Met > Trp. Tyrosine chlorination was evident only in reactions between HOCl and the Cys110Ala variant and at a longer incubation time (24 h), consistent with the formation via chlorine-transfer reactions from preformed chloramines. HOCl-mediated oxidation of wild-type HMb resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in the observed rate constant for ferric heme reduction (approx two-fold at HOCl:Mb of 10:1 mol:mol). These data indicate that Cys110 influences the oxidation of HMb by HOCl and that oxidation of Cys, Met, and Trp residues is associated with a decrease in the one-electron reduction of ferric HMb by other proteins; such heme-Fe3+ reduction is critical to the maintenance of function as an oxygen storage protein in tissues.  相似文献   

4.
Nitric oxide (.NO) regulates vascular function, and myoglobin (Mb) is a heme protein present in skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscle, where it facilitates O(2) transfer. Human ferric Mb binds .NO to yield nitrosylheme and S-nitroso (S-NO) Mb (Witting, P. K., Douglas, D. J., and Mauk, A. G. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 3991-3998). Here we show that human ferrous oxy-myoglobin (oxyMb) oxidizes .NO, with a second order rate constant k = 2.8 +/- 0.1 x 10(7) M(-1).s(-1) as determined by stopped-flow spectroscopy. Mixtures containing oxyMb and S-nitrosoglutathione or S-nitrosocysteine added at 1.5-2 moles of S-nitrosothiol/mol oxyMb yielded S-NO oxyMb through trans-nitrosation equilibria as confirmed with mass spectrometry. Rate constants for the equilibrium reactions were k(forward) = 110 +/- 3 and k(reverse) = 16 +/- 3 M(-1).s(-1) for S-nitrosoglutathione and k(forward) = 293 +/- 5 and k(reverse) = 20 +/- 2 M(-1).s(-1) for S-nitrosocysteine. Incubation of S-NO oxyMb with Cu(2+) ions stimulated .NO release as measured with a .NO electrode. Similarly, Cu(2+) released .NO from Mb immunoprecipitated from cultured human vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) that were pre-treated with diethylaminenonoate. No .NO release was observed from VSMCs treated with vehicle alone or immunoprecipitates obtained from porcine aortic endothelial cells with and without diethylaminenonoate treatment. Importantly, pre-constricted aortic rings relaxed in the presence of S-NO oxyMb in a cyclic GMP-dependent process. These data indicate that human oxyMb rapidly oxidizes .NO and that biologically relevant S-nitrosothiols can trans-(S)nitrosate human oxyMb. Furthermore, S-NO oxyMb can be isolated from cultured human VSMCs exposed to an exogenous .NO donor at physiologic concentration. The potential biologic implications of S-NO oxyMb acting as a source of .NO are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The sequence of human myoglobin (Mb) is similar to that of other species except for a unique cysteine at position 110 (Cys(110)). Adding hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) to human Mb affords Trp(14)-peroxyl, Tyr(103)-phenoxyl, and Cys(110)-thiyl radicals and coupling of Cys(110)-thiyl radicals yields a homodimer through intermolecular disulfide bond formation (Witting, P. K., Douglas, D. J., and Mauk, A. G. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 20391-20398). Treating a solution of wild type Mb and H(2)O(2) with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) at DMPO:protein /= 100 mol/mol only DMPO-Tyr(103) radicals were present. The DMPO-dependent decrease in DMPO-Cys(110) was matched by a near 1:1 stoichiometric increase in DMPO-Tyr(103). In contrast, reaction of the Y103F human Mb with H(2)O(2) gave no DMPO-Cys(110) at DMPO:protein /= 100 mol/mol (i.e. conditions that consistently gave DMPO-Tyr(103) in the case of wild type Mb). No detectable homodimer was formed by incubation of the Y103F variant with H(2)O(2). However, the homodimer was detected in a mixture of both the Y103F and C110A variants of human Mb upon treatment with H(2)O(2) (C110A:Y103F:H(2)O(2) 2:1:5 mol/mol/mol); the yield of this homodimer increased with increasing ratios of C110A:Y103F. Together, these data suggest that addition of H(2)O(2) to human Mb can produce Cys(110)-thiyl radicals through an intermolecular electron transfer reaction from Cys(110) to a Tyr(103)-phenoxyl radical.  相似文献   

6.
Cao W  Christian JF  Champion PM  Rosca F  Sage JT 《Biochemistry》2001,40(19):5728-5737
Flash photolysis investigations of horse heart metmyoglobin bound with NO (Mb(3+)NO) reveal the kinetics of water entry and binding to the heme iron. Photodissociation of NO leaves the sample in the dehydrated Mb(3+) (5-coordinate) state. After NO photolysis and escape, a water molecule enters the heme pocket and binds to the heme iron, forming the 6-coordinate aquometMb state (Mb(3+)H2O). At longer times, NO displaces the H2O ligand to reestablish equilibrium. At 293 K, we determine a value k(w) approximately 5.7 x 10(6) s(-1) for the rate of H2O binding and estimate the H2O dissociation constant as 60 mM. The Arrhenius barrier height H(w) = 42 +/- 3 kJ/mol determined for H2O binding is identical to the barrier for CO escape after photolysis of Mb(2+)CO, within experimental uncertainty, consistent with a common mechanism for entry and exit of small molecules from the heme pocket. We propose that both processes are gated by displacement of His-64 from the heme pocket. We also observe that the bimolecular NO rebinding rate is enhanced by 3 orders of magnitude both for the H64L mutant, which does not bind water, and for the H64G mutant, where the bound water is no longer stabilized by hydrogen bonding with His-64. These results emphasize the importance of the hydrogen bond in stabilizing H2O binding and thus preventing NO scavenging by ferric heme proteins at physiological NO concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
The heme coordination chemistry and spectroscopic properties of Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome c' (RCCP) have been compared to data from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (AXCP), with the aim of understanding the basis for their different reactivities with nitric oxide (NO). Whereas ferrous AXCP reacts with NO to form a predominantly five-coordinate heme-nitrosyl complex via a six-coordinate intermediate, RCCP forms an equilibrium mixture of six-coordinate and five-coordinate heme-nitrosyl species in approximately equal proportions. Ferrous RCCP and AXCP both exhibit high Fe-His stretching frequencies (227 and 231 cm(-)(1), respectively), suggesting that factors other than the Fe-His bond strength account for their differences in heme-nitrosyl coordination number. Resonance Raman spectra of ferrous-nitrosyl RCCP confirm the presence of both five-coordinate and six-coordinate heme-NO complexes. The six-coordinate heme-nitrosyl of RCCP exhibits a fairly typical Fe-NO stretching frequency (569 cm(-)(1)), in contrast to the relatively high value (579 cm(-)(1)) of the AXCP six-coordinate heme-nitrosyl intermediate. It is proposed that NO experiences greater steric hindrance in binding to the distal face of AXCP, as compared to RCCP, leading to a more distorted Fe-N-O geometry and an elevated Fe-NO stretching frequency. Evidence that RCCP has a more accessible distal coordination site than in AXCP stems from the fact that ferric RCCP readily forms a heme complex with exogenous imidazole, whereas AXCP does not. A model is proposed in which distal heme-face accessibility, rather than the proximal Fe-His bond strength, determines the heme-nitrosyl coordination number in cytochromes c'.  相似文献   

8.
Photoacoustic calorimetry and transient absorption spectroscopy were used to study conformational dynamics associated with CO photodissociation from horse heart myoglobin (Mb) reconstituted with either Fe protoporphyrin IX dimethylester (FePPDME), Fe octaethylporphyrin (FeOEP), or with native Fe protoporphyrin IX (FePPIX). The volume and enthalpy changes associated with the Fe-CO bond dissociation and formation of a transient deoxyMb intermediate for the reconstituted Mbs were found to be similar to those determined for native Mb (DeltaV1 = -2.5+/-0.6 ml mol(-1) and DeltaH1 = 8.1+/-3.0 kcal mol(-1)). The replacement of FePPIX by FeOEP significantly alters the conformational dynamics associated with CO release from protein. Ligand escape from FeOEP reconstituted Mb was determined to be roughly a factor of two faster (tau=330 ns) relative to native protein (tau=700 ns) and accompanying reaction volume and enthalpy changes were also found to be smaller (DeltaV2 = 5.4+/-2.5 ml mol(-1) and DeltaH2 = 0.7+/-2.2 kcal mol(-1)) than those for native Mb (DeltaV2 = 14.3+/-0.8 ml mol(-1) and DeltaH2 = 7.8+/-3.5 kcal mol(-1)). On the other hand, volume and enthalpy changes for CO release from FePPIX or FePPDME reconstituted Mb were nearly identical to those of the native protein. These results suggest that the hydrogen bonding network between heme propionate groups and nearby amino acid residues likely play an important role in regulating ligand diffusion through protein matrix. Disruption of this network leads to a partially open conformation of protein with less restricted ligand access to the heme binding pocket.  相似文献   

9.
This paper reports the first report of rapid, reversible direct electron transfer between a redox protein, specifically, horse myoglobin, and a solid electrode substrate in nonaqueous media and the spectroscopic (UV-vis, fluorescence, and resonance Raman) characterization of the relevant redox forms of myoglobin (Mb) in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). In DMSO, the heme active site of metmyoglobin (metMb) appears to remain six-coordinate high-spin, binding water weakly. Changes in the UV-fluorescence spectra for metMb in DMSO indicate that the protein secondary structure has been perturbed and suggest that helix A has moved away from the heme. UV-vis and RR spectra for deoxyMb in DMSO suggest that the heme iron is six-coordinate low-spin, most likely coordinating DMSO. Addition of CO to deoxyMb in DMSO produces a single, photostable six-coordinate CO adduct. UV-vis and RR for Mb-CO in DMSO are consistent with a six-coordinate low-spin heme iron binding His93 weakly, if at all. The polarity of the distal heme pocket is comparable to that of the closed form of horse Mb-CO in aqueous solution, pH 7. Direct electron transfer between horse Mb and Au in DMSO solution was investigated by cyclic voltammetry. Mb exhibits stable and well-defined electrochemical responses that do not appear to be affected by the water content (1.3-7.5%). The electrochemical characteristics are consistent with a one-electron, quasi-reversible, diffusion-controlled charge transfer process at Au. E degrees for horse Mb in DMSO at Au is -0.241+/-0.005 V vs. NHE. The formal heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant, calculated from delta E(p) at 20 mV/s, is 1.7+/-0.5 x 10(-4) cm/s. The rate, which is unaffected by the presence of 1.3-7.5% water, is competitive with that previously reported for horse Mb in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

10.
Rat neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) contains an Akt-dependent phosphorylation motif in its reductase domain. We mutated a target residue in that site (Ser-1412 to Asp) to mimic phosphorylation and then characterized the mutant using conventional and stopped-flow spectroscopies. Compared with wild-type, S1412D nNOS catalyzed faster cytochrome c and ferricyanide reduction but displayed slower steady-state NO synthesis with greater uncoupling of NADPH oxidation. Paradoxically, the mutant had faster heme reduction, faster heme-NO complex formation, and greater heme-NO complex accumulation at steady state. To understand how these behaviors related to flavin and heme reduction rates, we utilized three soybean calmodulins (CaMs) that supported a range of slower flavin and heme reduction rates in mutant and wild-type nNOS. Reductase activity and two catalytic parameters (speed and amount of heme-NO complex formation) related directly to the speed of flavin and heme reduction. In contrast, steady-state NO synthesis increased, reached a plateau, and then fell at the highest rate of heme reduction that was obtained with S1412D nNOS + CaM. Substituting with soybean CaM slowed heme reduction and increased steady-state NO synthesis by the mutant. We conclude the following. 1) The S1412D mutation speeds electron transfer out of the reductase domain. 2) Faster heme reduction speeds intrinsic NO synthesis but diminishes NO release in the steady state. 3) Heme reduction displays an optimum regarding NO release during steady state. The unique behavior of S1412D nNOS reveals the importance of heme reduction rate in controlling steady-state activity and suggests that nNOS already has a near-optimal rate of heme reduction.  相似文献   

11.
Nitric oxide (NO) is synthesized from L-Arg in the P450-type heme active site of nitric-oxide synthase (NOS). The internal axial ligand of the heme, Cys415, may hydrogen-bond to the side chain of the conserved Arg418 residue in neuronal NOS (nNOS). To understand the role of Arg418, we generated the nNOS mutants, Arg418Ala and Arg418Leu. NO formation activities with the mutants using both L-Arg and NHA as substrates were less than 0.1 nmol/min/nmol heme, in contrast to rates of 34-35 nmol/min/nmol heme with the wild-type enzyme. The heme reduction rate of the mutants was very slow, less than 10(-2) min(-1), in contrast with that (more than 10 min(-1)) of the wild type. The backbone amide group of Arg418 interacts with the Cys415 thiolate through van der Waals contact, whereas the carbonyl oxygen of Cys415 and the guanidino N(epsilon) atom of Arg418 form a tight hydrogen bond. The results suggest that Arg418 is critical in preserving the heme proximal structure and thus, is indirectly involved in both catalysis and electron transfer from the reductase domain to the heme.  相似文献   

12.
We studied steps that make up the initial and steady-state phases of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis to understand how activity of bovine endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) is regulated. Stopped-flow analysis of NADPH-dependent flavin reduction showed the rate increased from 0. 13 to 86 s(-1) upon calmodulin binding, but this supported slow heme reduction in the presence of either Arg or N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine (0.005 and 0.014 s(-1), respectively, at 10 degrees C). O(2) binding to ferrous eNOS generated a transient ferrous dioxy species (Soret peak at 427 nm) whose formation and decay kinetics indicate it can participate in NO synthesis. The kinetics of heme-NO complex formation were characterized under anaerobic conditions and during the initial phase of NO synthesis. During catalysis heme-NO complex formation required buildup of relatively high solution NO concentrations (>50 nm), which were easily achieved with N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine but not with Arg as substrate. Heme-NO complex formation caused eNOS NADPH oxidation and citrulline synthesis to decrease 3-fold and the apparent K(m) for O(2) to increase 6-fold. Our main conclusions are: 1) The slow steady-state rate of NO synthesis by eNOS is primarily because of slow electron transfer from its reductase domain to the heme, rather than heme-NO complex formation or other aspects of catalysis. 2) eNOS forms relatively little heme-NO complex during NO synthesis from Arg, implying NO feedback inhibition has a minimal role. These properties distinguish eNOS from the other NOS isoforms and provide a foundation to better understand its role in physiology and pathology.  相似文献   

13.
Boggs S  Huang L  Stuehr DJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(9):2332-2339
To better understand the mechanism of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis, we studied conversion of N-hydroxy-L-arginine (NOHA) or L-arginine (Arg) to citrulline and NO under single-turnover conditions using the oxygenase domain of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOSoxy) and rapid scanning stopped-flow spectroscopy. When anaerobic nNOSoxy saturated with H(4)B and NOHA was provided with 0.5 or 1 electron per heme and then exposed to air at 25 degrees C, it formed 0.5 or 1 mol of citrulline/mol of heme, respectively, indicating that NOHA conversion had 1:1 stoichiometry with respect to electrons added. Identical experiments with Arg produced substoichiometric amounts of NOHA or citrulline even when up to 3 electrons were provided per heme. Transient spectral intermediates were investigated at 10 degrees C. For NOHA, four species were observed in the following sequence: starting ferrous nNOSoxy, a transient ferrous-dioxygen complex, a transient ferric-NO complex, and ferric nNOSoxy. For Arg, transient intermediates other than the ferrous-dioxygen species were not apparent during the reaction. Our results provide a kinetic framework for formation and reactions of the ferrous-dioxygen complex in each step of NO synthesis and establish that (1) the ferrous-dioxy enzyme reacts quantitatively with NOHA but not with Arg and (2) its reaction with NOHA forms 1 NO/heme, which immediately binds to form a ferric heme-NO complex.  相似文献   

14.
Yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) and horse metmyoglobin (Mb) bind HN3 with similar affinities at 25 degrees C. The pH-independent equilibrium association constants for formation of the CcP.HN3 and Mb.HN3 complexes are (1.05 +/- 0.06)x10(5) and (1.6 +/- 0.8)x10(5) M(-1), respectively. However, the thermodynamic parameters for formation of the two complexes are quite different. The DeltaH0 values for formation of CcP.HN3 and Mb.HN3 are -16.4 +/- 0.7 and -9.0 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol, respectively, and the Delta S0 values are -32 +/- 2 and -16 +/- 2 cal/deg mol, respectively. The proton associated with HN3 is retained in both protein complexes at low pH but dissociates with apparent pKA values of 5.5 +/- 0.2 and > or =8.2 for the Mb.HN3 and CcP.HN3 complexes, respectively. CcP and Mb differ significantly in their reactivity toward the azide anion, N3-. CcP binds N3- very weakly, if at all, and only an upper-limit of 18 +/-5 M(-1) for the pH-independent equilibrium association constant for the CcP.N3- complex can be determined. Mb binds N3- with an association constant of (1.8 +/- 0.1)x10(4) M(-1). The ratio of the equilibrium association constants for HN3 and N3- binding provides a discrimination factor between the neutral and charged forms of the ligand. The discrimination factor is greater than 5800 for CcP but only nine for Mb. Protonation of the distal histidines in the two proteins influences binding of HN3. Protonation of His-64 in Mb enhances HN3 binding due to a gating mechanism while protonation of His-52 in CcP decreases the affinity for HN3 due to loss of base-assisted association of the ligand to the heme iron.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The aim of this study was to investigate the significance of two intracellular scavengers of nitric oxide (NO): 1) superoxide dismutase (SOD) (SOD2) to scavenge intramitochondrial superoxide anion, and 2) cytosolic myoglobin (Mb) in the regulation of tissue O2 consumption. O2 consumption was measured in vitro using a Clark-type O2 electrode. SOD heterozygous mice (SODHZ) (n = 13) and SOD wild-type (SODWT) (n = 5) mice were used. Bradykinin (BK, 10-4 mol/l) reduced O2 consumption by 15% +/- 1 in hearts of SODHZ mice, which was significantly different from SODWT (reduced by 24 +/- 0.4%). Tiron significantly increased the inhibition of O2 consumption by BK in male mice from 15 +/- 1% (n = 13) to 29 +/- 1.2% (n = 4) at 10-4 mol/l concentration (P < 0.05). The effect of carbachol was similar to BK. S-nitroso-N-acetyl penicillamine (SNAP, 10-4 mol/l) reduced O2 consumption by 39 +/- 1.3% in hearts of SODHZ mice, which was not significantly different from SODWT. But at 10-7 mol/l, SNAP caused significantly less inhibition of O2 consumption in SODHZ mice. Mb knockout (MbKO; Mb wild-type n = 6) and (MbWT) mice (n = 6) were also used. Kidney cortex was studied as the negative control because it does not contain Mb. BK (10-4 mol/l) reduced O2 consumption by 32 +/- 2, 29 +/- 1, and 26 +/- 1% in the heart, skeletal muscle, and kidney of MbKO mice, which was also not significantly different from MbWT. SNAP (10-4 mol/l) reduced O2 consumption by 39 +/- 3, 42 +/- 4, and 46 +/- 2% in the heart, skeletal muscle, and kidney of MbKO mice, which was also not significantly different from MbWT. NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (P < 0.05) inhibited the reduction in O2 consumption induced by BK in the MbKO mouse heart (15 +/- 1%), skeletal muscle (17 +/- 1%), and kidney (17 +/- 1%) as in the MbWT mice. These results suggest that the role of Mb as an intracellular NO scavenger is small, and the increase in mitochondrial superoxide in SODHZ mice may cause a decrease NO bioavailability and alter the control of myocardial O2 consumption by NO.  相似文献   

17.
The discovery that cysteine (Cys) S-nitrosation of trout myoglobin (Mb) increases heme O2 affinity has revealed a novel allosteric effect that may promote hypoxia-induced nitric oxide (NO) delivery in the trout heart and improve myocardial efficiency. To better understand this allosteric effect, we investigated the functional effects and structural origin of S-nitrosation in selected fish Mbs differing by content and position of reactive cysteine (Cys) residues. The Mbs from the Atlantic salmon and the yellowfin tuna, containing two and one reactive Cys, respectively, were S-nitrosated in vitro by reaction with Cys-NO to generate Mb-SNO to a similar yield (∼0.50 SH/heme), suggesting reaction at a specific Cys residue. As found for trout, salmon Mb showed a low O2 affinity (P 50 = 2.7 torr) that was increased by S-nitrosation (P 50 = 1.7 torr), whereas in tuna Mb, O2 affinity (P 50 = 0.9 torr) was independent of S-nitrosation. O2 dissociation rates (k off) of trout and salmon Mbs were not altered when Cys were in the SNO or N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) forms, suggesting that S-nitrosation should affect O2 affinity by raising the O2 association rate (k on). Taken together, these results indicate that O2-linked S-nitrosation may occur specifically at Cys107, present in salmon and trout Mb but not in tuna Mb, and that it may relieve protein constraints that limit O2 entry to the heme pocket of the unmodified Mb by a yet unknown mechanism. UV-Vis and resonance Raman spectra of the NEM-derivative of trout Mb (functionally equivalent to Mb-SNO and not photolabile) were identical to those of the unmodified Mb, indicating that S-nitrosation does not affect the extent or nature of heme-ligand stabilization of the fully ligated protein. The importance of S-nitrosation of Mb in vivo is confirmed by the observation that Mb-SNO is present in trout hearts and that its level can be significantly reduced by anoxic conditions.  相似文献   

18.
After initiating NO synthesis a majority of neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) quickly partitions into a ferrous heme-NO complex. This down-regulates activity and increases enzyme K(m,O(2)). To understand this process, we developed a 10-step kinetic model in which the ferric heme-NO enzyme forms as the immediate product of catalysis, and then partitions between NO dissociation versus reduction to a ferrous heme-NO complex. Rate constants used for the model were derived from recent literature or were determined here. Computer simulations of the model precisely described both pre-steady and steady-state features of nNOS catalysis, including NADPH consumption and NO production, buildup of a heme-NO complex, changes between pre-steady and steady-state rates, and the change in enzyme K(m,O(2)) in the presence or absence of NO synthesis. The model also correctly simulated the catalytic features of nNOS mutants W409F and W409Y, which are hyperactive and display less heme-NO complex formation in the steady state. Model simulations showed how the rate of heme reduction influences several features of nNOS catalysis, including populations of NO-bound versus NO-free enzyme in the steady state and the rate of NO synthesis. The simulation predicts that there is an optimum rate of heme reduction that is close to the measured rate in nNOS. Ratio between NADPH consumption and NO synthesis is also predicted to increase with faster heme reduction. Our kinetic model is an accurate and versatile tool for understanding catalytic behavior and will provide new perspectives on NOS regulation.  相似文献   

19.
1H-NMR spectra of deoxy myoglobins (Mbs) from shark (Galeorhinus japonicus), horse, and sperm whale have been studied to gain insights into their active site structure. It has been demonstrated for the first time that nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) can be observed between heme peripheral side-chain proton resonances of these paramagnetic complexes. Val-E11 methyl and His-F8 C delta H proton resonances of these Mbs were also assigned from the characteristic shift and line width. The hyperfine shift of the former resonance was used to calculate the magnetic anisotropy of the protein. The shift analysis of the latter resonance, together with the previously assigned His-F8 N delta H proton resonance, revealed that the strain on the Fe-N epsilon bond is in the order horse Mb approximately whale Mb < shark Mb and that the hydrogen bond strength of the His-F8 N delta H proton to the main-chain carbonyl oxygen in the preceding turn of the F helix is in the order shark Mb < horse Mb < whale Mb. Weaker Feporphyrin interaction in shark Mb was manifested in a smaller shift of the heme methyl proton resonance and appears to result from distortion of the coordination geometry in this Mb. Larger strain on the Fe-N epsilon bond in shark Mb should be to some extent attributed to its lowered O2 affinity (P50 = 1.1 mmHg at 20 degrees C), compared to whale and horse Mbs.  相似文献   

20.
Nitric oxide (NO) release from nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) depends on the dissociation of a ferric heme-NO product complex (FeIIINO) that forms immediately after NO is made in the heme pocket. The NOS-like enzyme of Bacillus subtilis (bsNOS) has 10-20 fold slower FeIIINO dissociation rate (kd) and NO association rate (kon) compared to mammalian NOS counterparts. We previously showed that an Ile for Val substitution at the opening of the heme pocket in bsNOS contributes to these differences. The complementary mutation in mouse inducible NOS oxygenase domain (Val346Ile) decreased the NO kon and kd by 8 and 3-fold, respectively, compared to wild-type iNOSoxy, and also slowed the reductive processing of the heme-O2 catalytic intermediate. To investigate how these changes affect steady-state catalytic behaviors, we generated and characterized the V346I mutant of full-length inducible NOS (iNOS). The mutant exhibited a 4-5 fold lower NO synthesis activity, an apparent uncoupled NADPH consumption, and formation of a heme-NO complex during catalysis that was no longer sensitive to solution NO scavenging. We found that these altered catalytic behaviors were not due to changes in the heme reduction rate or in the stability of the enzyme heme-O2 intermediate, but instead were due to the slower NO kon and kd and a slower oxidation rate of the enzyme ferrous heme-NO complex. Computer simulations that utilized the measured kinetic values confirmed this interpretation, and revealed that the V346I iNOS has an enhanced NADPH-dependent NO dioxygenase activity that converts almost 1 NO to nitrate for every NO that the enzyme releases into solution. Together, our results highlight the importance of heme pocket geometry in tuning the NO release versus NO dioxygenase activities of iNOS.  相似文献   

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