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1.
Histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG) binds both hemes and metal ions simultaneously with evidence for interaction between the two. This study uses resonance Raman and optical absorption spectroscopies to examine the heme environment of the 1:1 iron-mesoporphyrin.HRG complex in its oxidized, reduced and CO-bound forms in the absence and presence of copper. Significant perturbation of Fe(3+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG is induced by Cu2+ binding to the protein. Specifically, high frequency heme resonance Raman bands indicative of low-spin, six-coordinate iron before Cu2+ binding exhibit monotonic intensity shifts to bands representing high-spin, five-coordinate iron. The latter coordination is in contrast to that found in hemoglobin and myoglobin, and explains the Cu(2+)-induced decrease and broadening of the Fe(3+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG Soret band concomitant with the increase in the high-spin marker band at 620 nm. After dithionite reduction, the Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG complex displays high frequency resonance Raman bands characteristic of low-spin heme and no iron-histidine stretch, which together suggest six-coordinate iron. Furthermore, the local heme environment of the complex is not altered by the binding of Cu1+. CO-bound Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG exhibits bands in the high and low frequency regions similar to those of other CO-bound heme proteins except that the iron-CO stretch at 505 cm-1 is unusually broad with delta nu approximately 30 cm-1. The dynamics of CO photolysis and rebinding to Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG are also distinctive. The net quantum yield for photolysis at 10 ns is low relative to most heme proteins, which may be attributed to very rapid geminate recombination. A similar low net quantum yield and broad iron-CO stretch have so far only been observed in a dimeric cytochrome c' from Chromatium vinosum. Furthermore, the photolytic transient of Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG lacks bands corresponding to high-spin, five-coordinate iron as is found in hemoglobin and myoglobin under similar experimental conditions, suggesting iron hexacoordination before CO recombination. These data are consistent with a closely packed distal heme pocket that hinders ligand diffusion into the surrounding solvent.  相似文献   

2.
Tyrosine 43 is positioned parallel to the fifth heme axial ligand, His34, of heme 1 in the tetraheme cytochrome c(3). The replacement of tyrosine with leucine increased the redox potential of heme 1 by 44 and 35 mV at the first and last reduction steps, respectively; its effects on the other hemes are small. In contrast, the Y43F mutation hardly changed the potentials. It shows that the aromatic ring at this position contributes to lowering the redox potential of heme 1 locally, although this cannot be the major contribution to the extremely low redox potentials of cytochrome c(3). Furthermore, temperature-dependent line-width broadening in partially reduced samples established that the aromatic ring at position 43 participates in the control of the kinetics of intramolecular electron transfer. The rate of reduction of Y43L cytochrome c(3) by 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone under partially reduced conditions was significantly different from that of the wild type in the last stage of the reduction, supporting the involvement of Tyr43 in regulation of reduction kinetics. The mutation of Y43L, however, did not induce a significant change in the crystal structure.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the role of the heme axial ligand in the conformational stability of c-type cytochrome, we constructed M58C and M58H mutants of the red alga Porphyra yezoensis cytochrome c(6) in which the sixth heme iron ligand (Met58) was replaced with Cys and His residues, respectively. The Gibbs free energy change for unfolding of the M58H mutant in water (DeltaG degrees (unf)=1.48 kcal/mol) was lower than that of the wild-type (2.43 kcal/mol), possibly due to the steric effects of the mutation on the apoprotein structure. On the other hand, the M58C mutant exhibited a DeltaG degrees (unf) of 5.45 kcal/mol, a significant increase by 3.02 kcal/mol compared with that of wild-type. This increase was possibly responsible for the sixth heme axial bond of M58C mutant being more stable than that of wild-type according to the heme-bound denaturation curve. Based on these observations, we propose that the sixth heme axial ligand is an important key to determine the conformational stability of c-type cytochromes, and the sixth Cys heme ligand will give stabilizing effects.  相似文献   

4.
The heme iron coordination of unfolded ferric and ferrous cytochrome c in the presence of 7-9 M urea at different pH values has been probed by several spectroscopic techniques including magnetic and natural circular dichroism (CD), electrochemistry, UV-visible (UV-vis) absorption and resonance Raman (RR). In 7-9 M urea at neutral pH, ferric cytochrome c is found to be predominantly a low spin bis-His-ligated heme center. In acidic 9 M urea solutions the UV-vis and near-infrared (NIR) magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) measurements have for the first time revealed the formation of a high spin His/H(2)O complex. The pK(a) for the neutral to acidic conversion is 5.2. In 9 M urea, ferrous cytochrome c is shown to retain its native ligation structure at pH 7. Formation of a five-coordinate high spin complex in equilibrium with the native form of ferrous cytochrome c takes place below the pK(a) 4.8. The formal redox potential of the His/H(2)O complex of cytochrome c in 9 M urea at pH 3 was estimated to be -0.13 V, ca. 100 mV more positive than E degrees ' estimated for the bis-His complex of cytochrome c in urea solution at pH 7.  相似文献   

5.
Substitution by cysteine of one of the heme iron axial ligands (His66) of flavocytochrome b2 (L-lactate:cytochrome c oxidoreductase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae) has resulted in an enzyme (H66C-b2) which remains a competent L-lactate dehydrogenase (kcat 272+/-6 s(-1), L-lactate KM 0.60+/-0.06 mM, 25 degrees C, I 0.10, Tris-HCl, pH 7.5) but which has no cytochrome c reductase activity. As a result of the mutation, the reduction potential of the heme was found to be -265+5 mV, over 240 mV more negative than that of the wild-type enzyme, and therefore unable to be reduced by L-lactate. Surface-enhanced resonance Raman spectroscopy indicates similarities between the heme of H66C-b2 and those of cytochromes P450, with a nu4 band at 1,345 cm(-1) which is indicative of cysteine heme-iron ligation. In addition, EPR spectroscopy yields g-values at 2.33, 2.22 and 1.94, typical of low-spin ferric cytochromes P450, optical spectra show features between 600 and 900 nm which are characteristic of sulfur coordination of the heme iron, and MCD spectroscopy shows a blue-shifted NIR CT band relative to the wild-type, implying that the H66C-b2 heme is P450-like. Interestingly, EPR evidence also suggests that the second histidine heme-iron ligand (His43) is displaced in the mutant enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
An increasing body of evidence ascribes to misfolded forms of cytochrome c (cyt c) a role in pathophysiological events such as apoptosis and disease. Here, we examine the conformational changes induced by lipid binding to horse heart cyt c at pH 7 and study the ability of ATP (and other nucleotides) to refold several forms of unfolded cyt c such as oleic acid-bound cyt c, nicked cyt c, and acid denatured cyt c. The CD and fluorescence spectra demonstrate that cyt c unfolded by oleic acid has an intact secondary structure, and a disrupted tertiary structure and heme environment. Furthermore, evidence from the Soret CD, electronic absorption, and resonance Raman spectra indicates the presence of an equilibrium of at least two low-spin species having distinct heme-iron(III) coordination. As a whole, the data indicate that binding of cyt c to oleic acid leads to a partially unfolded conformation of the protein, resembling that typical of the molten globule state. Interestingly, the native conformation is almost fully recovered in the presence of ATP or dATP, while other nucleotides, such as GTP, are ineffective. Molecular modeling of ATP binding to cyt c and mutagenesis experiments show the interactions of phosphate groups with Lys88 and Arg91, with adenosine ring interaction with Glu62 explaining the unfavorable binding of GTP. The finding that ATP and dATP are unique among the nucleotides in being able to turn non-native states of cyt c back to native conformation is discussed in the light of cyt c involvement in cell apoptosis.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The structure of a novel c(7)-type cytochrome domain that has two bishistidine coordinated hemes and one heme with histidine, methionine coordination (where the sixth ligand is a methionine residue) was determined at 1.7 A resolution. This domain is a representative of domains that form three polymers encoded by the Geobacter sulfurreducens genome. Two of these polymers consist of four and one protein of nine c(7)-type domains with a total of 12 and 27 hemes, respectively. Four individual domains (termed A, B, C, and D) from one such multiheme cytochrome c (ORF03300) were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The domain C produced diffraction quality crystals from 2.4 M sodium malonate (pH 7). The structure was solved by MAD method and refined to an R-factor of 19.5% and R-free of 21.8%. Unlike the two c(7) molecules with known structures, one from G. sulfurreducens (PpcA) and one from Desulfuromonas acetoxidans where all three hemes are bishistidine coordinated, this domain contains a heme which is coordinated by a methionine and a histidine residue. As a result, the corresponding heme could have a higher potential than the other two hemes. The apparent midpoint reduction potential, E(app), of domain C is -105 mV, 50 mV higher than that of PpcA.  相似文献   

9.
A native structure of the cytochrome b(6)f complex with improved resolution was obtained from crystals of the complex grown in the presence of divalent cadmium. Two Cd(2+) binding sites with different occupancy were determined: (i) a higher affinity site, Cd1, which bridges His143 of cytochrome f and the acidic residue, Glu75, of cyt b(6); in addition, Cd1 is coordinated by 1-2 H(2)O or 1-2 Cl(-); (ii) a second site, Cd2, of lower affinity for which three identified ligands are Asp58 (subunit IV), Glu3 (PetG subunit) and Glu4 (PetM subunit). Binding sites of quinone analogue inhibitors were sought to map the pathway of transfer of the lipophilic quinone across the b(6)f complex and to define the function of the novel heme c(n). Two sites were found for the chromone ring of the tridecyl-stigmatellin (TDS) quinone analogue inhibitor, one near the p-side [2Fe-2S] cluster. A second TDS site was found on the n-side of the complex facing the quinone exchange cavity as an axial ligand of heme c(n). A similar binding site proximal to heme c(n) was found for the n-side inhibitor, NQNO. Binding of these inhibitors required their addition to the complex before lipid used to facilitate crystallization. The similar binding of NQNO and TDS as axial ligands to heme c(n) implies that this heme utilizes plastoquinone as a natural ligand, thus defining an electron transfer complex consisting of hemes b(n), c(n), and PQ, and the pathway of n-side reduction of the PQ pool. The NQNO binding site explains several effects associated with its inhibitory action: the negative shift in heme c(n) midpoint potential, the increased amplitude of light-induced heme b(n) reduction, and an altered EPR spectrum attributed to interaction between hemes c(n) and b(n). A decreased extent of heme c(n) reduction by reduced ferredoxin in the presence of NQNO allows observation of the heme c(n) Soret band in a chemical difference spectrum.  相似文献   

10.
The two products from the reaction of horse heart ferricytochrome c with Chloramine-T, the FIII and FII CT-cytochromes, contain modification of the methionines to methionine sulfoxides, but they are distinct in their physiological functions. Conformational and heme-configurational characterization of the two CT-cytochromes has been carried out by using absorption, circular dichroism, fluorescence, proton magnetic resonance, and resonance Raman spectroscopy. The pH-absorption spectroscopic behavior, thermal stability, and ionization of the phenolic hydroxyls have also been reported. Spectroscopic studies of the heme c fragment, H8, in the presence of dimethylsulfoxide, as a model for CT-cytochrome heme configuration, were also conducted. The ferric and the ferrous CT-cytochromes above pH 7.5 have similar, yet distinct, spectroscopic properties, absorption, CD, resonance Raman, and PMR spectra, typical of low-spin hexacoordinated hemes, but distinct from those of the unmodified protein. The ferric spectrum lacks the 695-nm band, and the reduced spectrum contains an additional inflection at about 400 nm, a feature also observed in the spectra of ferrous H8-DMSO systems. The CD, resonance Raman, and PMR spectra are typical of a cytochrome with a loosened heme crevice and altered coordination configuration. The Methionine-80 proton resonances are absent in the uupfield PMR spectra of both the CT-ferricytochromes. The ferrous spectra, on the other hand, contain all the Met-80 resonances, but with smaller upfield shifts than those of the native protein. Both CT-ferric cytochromes are less stable in the acid region and convert to high-spin forms with a two-step transition and with a distinct set of pK a values. The overall conformation is nearly identical to that of the native protein, but it is less stable to thermal unfolding. All the factors differentiating the modified preparations from the unmodified protein are more pronunced in the case of FII, with FIII being the closest to the unmodified form. The two functionally distinct CT-cytochromes are two conformational isomers; conformationally and heme configurationally, they are spectroscopically very similar, yet distinct. Both contain an altered heme iron coordination configuration. The sulfur of Met-80 is repalced by the oxygen of Met-80 sulfoxide of a different configuration, R or S. Both contain a loosened heme crevice and are conformationally less stable than the native protein, FII CT-cytochrome c being the most deranged.  相似文献   

11.
The resonance Raman spectrum of turnip cytochrome f is similar to that of other c-type cytochromes with the exception of a single band at 1532 cm-1 which is shifted to lower frequency relative to its position (1542-1545 cm-1) in other c-type cytochromes. Comparison of the frequency of this band with that in alkylated cytochrome c at high pH suggests that the sixth heme iron ligand in cytochrome f is a deprotonated lysine amino group rather than a methionine sulfur. Comparison of the amino-acid sequences of cytochromes f and c1 suggests lysine-145 as a likely candidate for the sixth heme iron ligand in cytochrome f.  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome c maturation in many bacteria, archaea, and plant mitochondria involves the integral membrane protein CcmF, which is thought to function as a cytochrome c synthetase by facilitating the final covalent attachment of heme to the apocytochrome c. We previously reported that the E. coli CcmF protein contains a b-type heme that is stably and stoichiometrically associated with the protein and is not the heme attached to apocytochrome c. Here, we show that mutation of either of two conserved transmembrane histidines (His261 or His491) impairs stoichiometric b-heme binding in CcmF and results in spectral perturbations in the remaining heme. Exogeneous imidazole is able to correct cytochrome c maturation for His261 and His491 substitutions with small side chains (Ala or Gly), suggesting that a "cavity" is formed in these CcmF mutants in which imidazole binds and acts as a functional ligand to the b-heme. The results of resonance Raman spectroscopy on wild-type CcmF are consistent with a hexacoordinate low-spin b-heme with at least one endogeneous axial His ligand. Analysis of purified recombinant CcmF proteins from diverse prokaryotes reveals that the b-heme in CcmF is widely conserved. We have also determined the reduction potential of the CcmF b-heme (E(m,7) = -147 mV). We discuss these results in the context of CcmF structure and functions as a heme reductase and cytochrome c synthetase.  相似文献   

13.
To understand general aspects of stability and folding of c-type cytochromes, we have studied the folding characteristics of cytochrome c553 from Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough). This cytochrome is structurally similar but lacks sequence homology to other heme proteins; moreover, it has an abnormally low reduction potential. Unfolding of oxidized and reduced cytochrome c553 by guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) was monitored by circular dichroism (CD) and Soret absorption; the same unfolding curves were obtained with both methods supporting that cytochrome c553 unfolds by an apparent two-state process. Reduced cytochrome c553 is 7(3) kJ/mol more stable than the oxidized form; accordingly, the reduction potential of unfolded cytochrome c553 is 100(20) mV more negative than that of the folded protein. In contrast to many other unfolded cytochrome c proteins, upon unfolding at pH 7.0 both oxidized and reduced heme in cytochrome c553 become high-spin. The lack of heme misligation in unfolded cytochrome c553 implies that its unfolded structure is less constrained than those of cytochromes c with low-spin, misligated hemes.  相似文献   

14.
We have carried out a systematic investigation of salts- and alcohols-induced conformational alterations on the trifluoroacetic acid (TFA)-treated ferricytochrome c by soret absorption spectroscopy, far UV circular dichroism (CD), tryptophan fluorescence, and 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS) binding. TFA induces the unfolding of native cytochrome c obtained from horse heart leading to loss of secondary structure. The addition of increasing concentration of salts and alcohols leads to increase in MRE value at 222 and 208 nm indicating an increase in the alpha-helical content leading to formation of compact dimensional structure. Cytochrome c is a heme protein in which the resonance energy of tryptophan is transferred to heme resulting in quenched tryptophan fluorescence. Addition of alcohols leads to increase in tryptophan and ANS fluorescence. The tryptophan and ANS fluorescence in case of salts shows decreased fluorescence intensity. TFA-induced unfolded cytochrome c showed the soret absorption maximum at 394 nm. However, an intermediate state in presence of alcohols and salts showed the absorption maxima at 398 nm and 402 nm, respectively. Among all the salts and alcohols studied, K3Fe(CN)6 and butanol were found to be most effective as examined by the above-mentioned spectroscopic techniques. The order of effectiveness of alcohols was found to be butanol > propanol > ethanol > methanol. The following effective trend in the case of salts was obtained: K3Fe(CN)6 > K2SO4>KClO4 > KCl. These results suggest that alcohols induce an intermediate with molten globule-like conformation on the TFA unfolded state, whereas salts induce a refolded intermediate approaching native-like conformation.  相似文献   

15.
Two multihemic cytochromes c from the sulfur reducing bacteria Desulfuromonas acetoxidans have been studied by optical and resonance Raman spectroscopy: cytochrome c551.5, a trihemic cytochrome and cytochrome c Mr 50 000, a recently isolated high molecular mass cytochrome. The redox and Raman characteristics of cytochrome c551.5 are compared to those of the tetrahemic cytochromes c3 from Desulfovibrio. While the redox behavior, followed by spectroelectrochemistry, is similar to that of cytochrome c3, showing the same conformational change after reduction of the highest potential heme, the Raman data show a contribution from a His- form of the axial ligands and lead to the assignment of a band at 218 cm-1 to the Fe(III)-(His)2 stretching vibration. The Raman data on cytochrome c Mr 50 000 are in favor of an entirely low spin species with two different sets of axial ligands. A partially reduced state is easily accessible by ascorbate addition.  相似文献   

16.
Heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy was performed to determine the solution structure of (15)N-labeled ferrocytochrome c(3) from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki F (DvMF). Although the folding of the reduced cytochrome c(3) in solution was similar to that of the oxidized one in the crystal structure, the region involving hemes 1 and 2 was different. The redox-coupled conformational change is consistent with the reported solution structure of D. vulgaris Hildenborough ferrocytochrome c(3), but is different from those of other cytochromes c(3). The former is homologous with DvMF cytochrome c(3) in amino acid sequence. Small displacements of hemes 1 and 2 relative to hemes 3 and 4 were observed. This observation is consistent with the unusual behavior of the 2(1)CH(3) signal of heme 3 reported previously. As shown by the (15)N relaxation parameters of the backbone, a region between hemes 1 and 2 has more flexibility than the other regions. The results of this work strongly suggest that the cooperative reduction of hemes 1 and 2 is based on the conformational changes of the C-13 propionate of heme 1 and the aromatic ring of Tyr43, and the interaction between His34 and His 35 through covalent and coordination bonds.  相似文献   

17.
Bovine liver catalase (BLC), catalase-related allene oxide synthase (cAOS) from Plexaura homomalla, and a recently isolated protein from the cattle pathogen Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis (MAP-2744c (MAP)) are all tyrosinate-ligated heme enzymes whose crystal structures have been reported. cAOS and MAP have low (< 20%) sequence similarity to, and significantly different catalytic functions from, BLC. cAOS transforms 8R-hydroperoxy-eicosatetraenoic acid to an allene epoxide, whereas the MAP protein is a putative organic peroxide-dependent peroxidase. To elucidate factors influencing the functions of these and related heme proteins, we have investigated the heme iron coordination properties of these tyrosinate-ligated heme enzymes in their ferric and ferrous states using magnetic circular dichroism and UV-visible absorption spectroscopy. The MAP protein shows remarkable spectral similarities to cAOS and BLC in its native Fe(III) state, but clear differences from ferric proximal heme ligand His93Tyr Mb (myoglobin) mutant, which may be attributed to the presence of an Arg+-Nω-H···¯O-Tyr (proximal heme axial ligand) hydrogen bond in the first three heme proteins. Furthermore, the spectra of Fe(III)-CN¯, Fe(III)-NO, Fe(II)-NO (except for five-coordinate MAP), Fe(II)-CO, and Fe(II)-O2 states of cAOS and MAP, but not H93Y Mb, are also similar to the corresponding six-coordinate complexes of BLC, suggesting that a tyrosinate (Tyr-O¯) is the heme axial ligand trans to the bound ligands in these complexes. The Arg+-Nω-H to ¯O-Tyr hydrogen bond would be expected to modulate the donor properties of the proximal tyrosinate oxyanion and, combined with the subtle differences in the catalytic site structures, affect the activities of cAOS, MAP and BLC.  相似文献   

18.
Nagai M  Aki M  Li R  Jin Y  Sakai H  Nagatomo S  Kitagawa T 《Biochemistry》2000,39(43):13093-13105
Heme structures of a natural mutant hemoglobin (Hb), Hb M Iwate [alpha87(F8)His-->Tyr], and protonation of its F8-Tyr were examined with the 244-nm excited UV resonance Raman (UVRR) and the 406.7- and 441.6-nm excited visible resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy. It was clarified from the UVRR bands at 1605 and 1166 cm(-)(1) characteristic of tyrosinate that the tyrosine (F8) of the abnormal subunit in Hb M Iwate adopts a deprotonated form. UV Raman bands of other Tyr residues indicated that the protein takes the T-quaternary structure even in the met form. Although both hemes of alpha and beta subunits in metHb A take a six-coordinate (6c) high-spin structure, the 406.7-nm excited RR spectrum of metHb M Iwate indicated that the abnormal alpha subunit adopts a 5c high-spin structure. The present results and our previous observation of the nu(Fe)(-)(O(tyrosine)) Raman band [Nagai et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 2418-2422] have proved that F8-tyrosinate is covalently bound to Fe(III) heme in the alpha subunit of Hb M Iwate. As a result, peripheral groups of porphyrin ring, especially the vinyl and the propionate side chains, were so strongly influenced that the RR spectrum in the low-frequency region excited at 406.7 nm is distinctly changed from the normal pattern. When Hb M Iwate was fully reduced, the characteristic UVRR bands of tyrosinate disappeared and the Raman bands of tyrosine at 1620 (Y8a), 1207 (Y7a), and 1177 cm(-)(1) (Y9a) increased in intensity. Coordination of distal His(E7) to the Fe(II) heme in the reduced alpha subunit of Hb M Iwate was proved by the observation of the nu(Fe)(-)(His) RR band in the 441.6-nm excited RR spectrum at the same frequency as that of its isolated alpha chain. The effects of the distal-His coordination on the heme appeared as a distortion of the peripheral groups of heme. A possible mechanism for the formation of a Fe(III)-tyrosinate bond in Hb M Iwate is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The irradiation of deaerated solutions of horse heart cytochrome c causes the reduction of Fe(III) to Fe(II). The dependence of the photoreaction quantum yield on pH shows that the photoreactive species is a form of cytochrome c which contains methionine-80 and histidine-18 as heme ligands. The primary photochemical event consists of an electron transfer from the sulphur of methionine- 80 to iron. The re-oxidation of the photochemically obtained Fe(II) protein gives a Fe(III) cytochrome which exhibits a typical low-spin absorption spectrum, lacking the 695-nm band and indicating that a strong field ligand, other than methionine-80, coordinates to the sixth binding site of the heme iron. Spectrophotometric titration of the photochemically modified Fe(III) cytochrome shows that histidine- 18 remains bound in the fifth position.The substitution of methionine-80 with the more oxidizable azide ligand increases the efficiency of the intramolecular electron transfer. Azide radicals, detected by spin-trapping ESR technique, are formed in the primary act. Visible-UV spectral data indicate that histidine-18 and methionine-80 occupy the fifth and sixth position, respectively, in the photoreaction product. All the results obtained correlate well with those previously obtained in investigations concerning the photoredox behavior of iron porphyrin complexes.  相似文献   

20.
The non heme iron environment of photosystem II is studied by light-induced infrared spectroscopy. A conclusion of previous work [Hienerwadel, R., and Berthomieu, C. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 16288-16297] is that bicarbonate is a bidendate ligand of the reduced iron and a monodentate ligand in the Fe(3+) state. In this work, the effects of bicarbonate replacement with lactate, glycolate, and glyoxylate, and of o-phenanthroline binding are investigated to determine the specific interactions of bicarbonate with the protein. Fe(2+)/Fe(3+) FTIR spectra recorded with (12)C- and (13)C(1)-labeled lactate indicate that lactate displaces bicarbonate by direct binding to the iron through one carboxylate oxygen and the hydroxyl group in both the Fe(2+) and Fe(3+) states. This different binding mode with respect to bicarbonate could explain the lower midpoint of the iron couple observed in the presence of this anion [Deligiannakis, Y., Petrouleas, V., and Diner, B. A. (1994) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1188, 260-270]. In agreement with the -60 mV/pH unit dependence of the iron midpoint potential in the presence of bicarbonate, the proton release upon iron oxidation by photosystem II is directly measured to 0.95 +/- 0.05 by the comparison of infrared signals of phosphate buffer and ferrocyanide modes. This accurate method may be applied to the study of other redox reactions in proteins. The pH dependence of the iron couple is proposed to reflect the deprotonation of D1His215, a putative iron ligand located at the Q(B) pocket, since the signal at 1094 cm(-1) assigned to the nu(C-N) mode of a histidinate ligand in the Fe(3+) state is not observed in the presence of o-phenanthroline. Specific regulation of the pK(a) of D1His215 by bicarbonate is inferred from the absence of the band at 1094 cm(-1) in Fe(2+)/Fe(3+) spectra recorded with glycolate, glyoxylate, or lactate. A broad positive continuum, maximum at approximately 2550 cm(-1), observed in the presence of bicarbonate, but absent with o-phenanthroline or lactate, glycolate, and glyoxylate, indicates a hydrogen bond network from the non heme iron toward the Q(B) pocket involving bicarbonate and His D1-215. Proton release of about 1, measured upon iron oxidation at pH 6 with the latter anions, points to a proton release mechanism different from that involved in the presence of bicarbonate.  相似文献   

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