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1.
Agnathans have a globin repertoire that markedly differs from that of jawed (gnathostome) vertebrates. The sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) harbors at least 18 hemoglobin, two myoglobin, two globin X, and one cytoglobin genes. However, agnathan hemoglobins and myoglobins are not orthologous to their cognates in jawed vertebrates. Thus, blood-based O2 transport and muscle-based O2 storage proteins emerged twice in vertebrates from a tissue-globin ancestor. Notably, the sea lamprey displays three switches in hemoglobin expression in its life cycle, analogous to hemoglobin switching in vertebrates. To study the functional changes associated with the evolution and ontogenesis of distinct globin types, we determined O2 binding equilibria, type of quaternary assembly, and nitrite reductase enzymatic activities of one adult (aHb5a) and one embryonic/larval hemoglobin (aHb6), myoglobin (aMb1) and cytoglobin (Cygb) of the sea lamprey. We found clear functional differentiation among globin types expressed at different developmental stages and in different tissues. Cygb and aMb1 have high O2 affinity and nitrite reductase activity, while the two hemoglobins display low O2 affinity and nitrite reductase activity. Cygb and aHb6 but not aHb5a show cooperative O2 binding, correlating with increased stability of dimers, as shown by gel filtration and molecular modeling. The high O2-affinity and the lack of cooperativity confirm the identity of the sea lamprey aMb1 as O2 storage protein of the muscle. The dimeric structure and O2-binding properties of sea lamprey and mammalian Cygb were very similar, suggesting a conservation of function since their divergence around 500 million years ago.  相似文献   

2.
The infrared absorption spectrum of the CO-photoproduct from Scapharca inaequivalvis hemoglobin (Hbl) at 10 K yields only a single line in the "B" state region at 2132 cm-1. This is the same frequency as the B1 line observed in photodissociated vertebrate HbCO and MbCO. No evidence was found for the B2 line detected in vertebrate hemoglobins and myoglobin in the 2118-2120 cm-1 region. These data demonstrate that the protein does not have the same conformationally accessible ligand-binding sites as do vertebrate hemoglobins and myoglobins. The absence of the B2 line indicates that only a single weak site is accessible to the photolyzed CO molecule. These results are in accord with geminate rebinding experiments and ligand escape pathway calculations which have shown that the distal properties of Hbl are distinct from those of tetrameric hemoglobins and vertebrate myoglobins.  相似文献   

3.
Kawano K  Uda K  Otsuki R  Suzuki T 《FEBS letters》2004,574(1-3):203-207
Although most hemoglobins and myoglobins consist of 15-kDa single-domain subunits, structurally unusual hemoglobins, such as Artemia 9-domain and Barbatia 2-domain hemoglobins, occur naturally in several invertebrates. These hemoglobins appear to be the result of gene duplication and fusion. Using cDNA coding for the open reading frame of Aplysia kurodai myoglobin, artificial cDNA inserts corresponding to contiguous dimer, trimer, tetramer and octamer myoglobins (2-, 3-, 4- and 8-domain myoglobins) were prepared and cloned into pMAL or pQE plasmids. These artificial myoglobins and wild-type single-domain myoglobins were successfully expressed in Escherichia coli in the heme-attached, oxygenated form. Myoglobin was purified partially by ammonium sulfate fractionation and gel filtration, and autoxidation rates were examined. The autoxidation rates of recombinant wild-type myoglobins with MBP or hexameric His tag were comparable to those of native myoglobin, suggesting that the recombinant proteins appear to be properly folded and that the N-terminal MBP or His tag does not have an affect on the rate. On the other hand, the rates were significantly decreased in the 2- and 3-domain myoglobins (50% and 30% of the single-domain myoglobins, respectively). The rates for 4- and 8-domain myoglobins were similar to those for 3-domain myoglobin. These results indicate that the artificial poly-domain structure of myoglobin is more stable than the usual single-domain myoglobin from the viewpoint of storage of bound dioxygen.  相似文献   

4.
HmuO, a heme oxygenase of Corynebacterium diphtheriae, catalyzes degradation of heme using the same mechanism as the mammalian enzyme. The oxy form of HmuO, the precursor of the catalytically active ferric hydroperoxo species, has been characterized by ligand binding kinetics, resonance Raman spectroscopy, and x-ray crystallography. The oxygen association and dissociation rate constants are 5 microm(-1) s(-1) and 0.22 s(-1), respectively, yielding an O(2) affinity of 21 microm(-1), which is approximately 20 times greater than that of mammalian myoglobins. However, the affinity of HmuO for CO is only 3-4-fold greater than that for mammalian myoglobins, implying the presence of strong hydrogen bonding interactions in the distal pocket of HmuO that preferentially favor O(2) binding. Resonance Raman spectra show that the Fe-O(2) vibrations are tightly coupled to porphyrin vibrations, indicating the highly bent Fe-O-O geometry that is characteristic of the oxy forms of heme oxygenases. In the crystal structure of the oxy form the Fe-O-O angle is 110 degrees, the O-O bond is pointed toward the heme alpha-meso-carbon by direct steric interactions with Gly-135 and Gly-139, and hydrogen bonds occur between the bound O(2) and the amide nitrogen of Gly-139 and a distal pocket water molecule, which is a part of an extended hydrogen bonding network that provides the solvent protons required for oxygen activation. In addition, the O-O bond is orthogonal to the plane of the proximal imidazole side chain, which facilitates hydroxylation of the porphyrin alpha-meso-carbon by preventing premature O-O bond cleavage.  相似文献   

5.
The Co-NO stretching vibration has been assigned in the resonance Raman spectra of various cobalt-substituted monomeric hemoglobins by employing isotope-labeling of nitrosyl (14N16O, 15N16O, 14N18O). Monomeric hemoglobins with a distal histidine (sperm whale myoglobin and leghemoglobin) exhibit this vibration at 573-575 cm-1, whereas hemoglobins without distal histidine (elephant myoglobin and insect hemoglobin from Chironomus thummi thummi, CTT III) show this vibration in the range of 553-558 cm-1. The Fe-NO stretching vibration which occurs in the range of 554-556 cm-1 does not reflect the distal histidine-ligand interaction. Therefore, the Co-NO moiety which is isoelectronic with the Fe-O2 moiety is a good monitor for distal effects on the exogenous ligand of hemoglobins, especially due to the fact that in hemoglobins with distal histidine the Fe-O2 stretching vibration (567-572 cm-1) is similar to the Co-NO stretching vibration.  相似文献   

6.
Cytochrome c oxidase isolated from bovine heart was crystallized in the fully reduced carbon monoxide (CO)-bound form. To evaluate the structure of the O2 reaction site in crystals and in solution, the bound C-O stretch infrared band in protein crystals was compared with the band for protein solution. In solution, the C-O stretch band could be deconvoluted into two extremely narrow bands, one at 1963.6 cm-1 with delta v1/2 = 3.4 cm-1 of 60% Gaussian/40% Lorentzian character represented 86% of the total band area and the other at 1960.3 cm-1 with delta v1/2 = 3.0 cm-1 of 47% Gaussian/53% Lorentzian character represented 14% of the total band area. The crystals exhibited two deconvoluted C-O infrared bands having very similar band parameters with those in solution. These findings support the presence of two structurally similar conformers in both crystals and solution. Thus crystallization of this enzyme does not affect the structure at the CO-binding site to as great extent as has been noted for myoglobin and hemoglobin carbonyls, indicating that the active (CO- or O2-binding) site of cytochrome c oxidase must be conformationally very stable and highly ordered compared to other hemoproteins such as hemoglobin.  相似文献   

7.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to investigate the allosteric control mechanism for O2 binding in a cobalt-substituted dimeric insect hemoglobin (CTT II), which exhibits a large Bohr effect due to a pH-induced transition between two ligand affinity states. Substitution of cobalt for iron in CTT II does not modify the Bohr effect, but permits the resonance enhancement (hence the detection) of Raman lines corresponding to the vibrations of the axial ligand-cobalt bonds. Using 16O2/18O2 isotope substitution the O-O and Co-O2 stretching and the Co-O-O bending mode have been assigned to the two affinity states of this hemoglobin: v (O-O) changes from 1152 cm-1 (pH 5.5; t conformation) to about 1125 cm-1 (pH 9.5, r conformation), v (Co-O2) from 512 cm-1 (pH 5.5) to 537 cm-1 (pH 9.5) and delta (Co-O-O) from 378 cm-1 (pH 5.5) to 390 cm-1 (pH 9.5). The Co-N epsilon (His) stretching mode has also been detected changing from 313 cm-1 (pH 5.5) to 307 cm-1 (pH 9.5). For the first time, reciprocal behaviour between the Co-N epsilon and Co-O2 bonds and between the Co-O2 and the O-O bonds in an allosteric hemoglobin are demonstrated. Furthermore, the pH sensitivity of a vinyl bending mode in the range of 411-415 cm-1 has been investigated and shown also to reflect the t in equilibrium with r conformation transition.  相似文献   

8.
The infrared spectra for carbon monoxide complexed to hemoglobins were examined in the C-O stretch region. Deconvolution of the spectra requires four bands and supports the presence of four distinct conformers at the ligand binding site. Most typical hemoglobins exhibit only one predominant conformer for each subunit represented by a band at 1951 cm-1 in contrast to myoglobins, which typically exist in two major conformations. Several hemoglobins with an enlarged heme pocket are shown to shift the C-O frequency into the higher frequency conformer regions. Many factors, including pH, temperature, solvents, and divalent metals, are also shown to be capable of expanding the heme pocket. Only very specific structural changes that can reduce the size of the heme pocket will result in the lower frequency conformers. The weighted averages of the multiple CO vibrational frequencies are linearly related to the single 13CO NMR chemical shift values and to the exponential of fast CO on-rates. Conformer interconversion occurs at a rate greater than 10(4) s-1. The infrared C-O stretch spectra provide qualitative and quantitative information on the structural dynamics, stability, and ligand binding properties of hemoglobins.  相似文献   

9.
The 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectral characteristics of the cyano-Met form of Chironomus thummi thummi monomeric hemoglobins I, III and IV in 1H2O solvent are reported. A set of four exchangeable hyperfine-shifted resonances is found for each of the two heme-insertion isomers in the hyperfine-shifted region downfield of ten parts per million. An analysis of relaxation, exchange rates and nuclear Overhauser effects leads to assignments for all these resonances to histidine F8 and the side-chains of histidine E7 and arginine FG3. It is evident that in aqueous solution, the side-chain from histidine E7 does not occupy two orientations, as found for the solid state, rather the histidine E7 side-chain adopts a conformation similar to that of sperm whale myoglobin or hemoglobin A, oriented into the heme pocket and in contact with the bound ligand. Evidence is presented to show that the allosteric transition in the Chironomus thummi thummi hemoglobins arises from the "trans effect". An analysis of the exchange with bulk solvent of the assigned histidine E7 labile proton confirms that the group is completely buried within the heme pocket in a manner similar to that found for sperm whale cyano-Met myoglobin, and that the transient exposure to solvent is no more likely than in mammalian myoglobins with the "normal" distal histidine orientation. Finally, a comparison of solvent access to the heme pocket of the three monomeric C. thummi thummi hemoglobins, as measured from proton exchange rates of heme pocket protons, is made and correlated to binding studies with the diffusible small molecules such as O2.  相似文献   

10.
Myoglobin was isolated from the radular muscle of the chitonLiolophura japonica, a primitive archigastropodic mollusc.Liolophura contains three monomeric myoglobins (I, II, and III), and the complete amino acid sequence of myoglobin I has been determined. It is composed of 145 amino acid residues, and the molecular mass was calculated to be 16,070 D. The E7 distal histidine, which is replaced by valine or glutamine in several molluscan globins, is conserved inLiolophura myoglobin. The autoxidation rate at physiological conditions indicated thatLiolophura oxymyoglobin is fairly stable when compared with other molluscan myoglobins. The amino acid sequence ofLiolophura myoglobin shows low homology (11–21%) with molluscan dimeric myoglobins and hemoglobins, but shows higher homology (26–29%) with monomeric myoglobins from the gastropodic molluscsAplysia, Dolabella, andBursatella. A phylogenetic tree was constructed from 19 molluscan globin sequences. The tree separated them into two distinct clusters, a cluster for muscle myoglobins and a cluster for erythrocyte or gill hemoglobins. The myoglobin cluster is divided further into two subclusters, corresponding to monomeric and dimeric myoglobins, respectively.Liolophura myoglobin was placed on the branch of monomeric myoglobin lineage, showing that it diverged earlier from other monomeric myoglobins. The hemoglobin cluster is also divided into two subclusters. One cluster contains homodimeric, heterodimeric, tetrameric, and didomain chains of erythrocyte hemoglobins of the blood clamsAnadara, Scapharca, andBarbatia. Of special interest is the other subcluster. It consists of three hemoglobin chains derived from the bacterial symbiont-harboring clamsCalyptogena andLucina, in which hemoglobins are supposed to play an important role in maintaining the symbiosis with sulfide bacteria.  相似文献   

11.
Myoglobin was isolated from the radular muscle of the chitonLiolophura japonica, a primitive archigastropodic mollusc.Liolophura contains three monomeric myoglobins (I, II, and III), and the complete amino acid sequence of myoglobin I has been determined. It is composed of 145 amino acid residues, and the molecular mass was calculated to be 16,070 D. The E7 distal histidine, which is replaced by valine or glutamine in several molluscan globins, is conserved inLiolophura myoglobin. The autoxidation rate at physiological conditions indicated thatLiolophura oxymyoglobin is fairly stable when compared with other molluscan myoglobins. The amino acid sequence ofLiolophura myoglobin shows low homology (11–21%) with molluscan dimeric myoglobins and hemoglobins, but shows higher homology (26–29%) with monomeric myoglobins from the gastropodic molluscsAplysia, Dolabella, andBursatella. A phylogenetic tree was constructed from 19 molluscan globin sequences. The tree separated them into two distinct clusters, a cluster for muscle myoglobins and a cluster for erythrocyte or gill hemoglobins. The myoglobin cluster is divided further into two subclusters, corresponding to monomeric and dimeric myoglobins, respectively.Liolophura myoglobin was placed on the branch of monomeric myoglobin lineage, showing that it diverged earlier from other monomeric myoglobins. The hemoglobin cluster is also divided into two subclusters. One cluster contains homodimeric, heterodimeric, tetrameric, and didomain chains of erythrocyte hemoglobins of the blood clamsAnadara, Scapharca, andBarbatia. Of special interest is the other subcluster. It consists of three hemoglobin chains derived from the bacterial symbiont-harboring clamsCalyptogena andLucina, in which hemoglobins are supposed to play an important role in maintaining the symbiosis with sulfide bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of changes in the groups attached to the periphery of the porphyrin ring of the heme of various hemoglobin and myoglobins on the environment experienced by the ligand, carbon monoxide, have been studied by observation of the chemical shift of the bound 13CO. The results indicate that the major interaction between bound ligands and substituents around the porphyrin is that transmitted electronically from substituent to ligand. The nature of the protein environment around the ligand and the interaction between the proximal histidine (F8) and the ligand (through the iron atom) impose differences between subunits of hemoglobin and between myoglobins and hemoglobins which are largely, but not entirely, independent of these substituent effects. To assess the influence of protein structure on the chemical shifts of bound ligand, the shifts of 13CO bound to myoglobin and hemoglobins from a wide range of species have also been measured.  相似文献   

13.
A molecular model of hemoglobin was constructed which made it possible to visualize the relation between various amino acid residues in the molecule. The model indicates that electrostatic forces might play a significant role in holding the subunits of hemoglobin together. This would explain why myoglobin does not form a tetramer while four β-chains, which are structurally similar to myoglobin, do assemble into a hemoglobin H molecule. Also, as far as the primary structures of hemoglobin chains of various species are known, the proposed ionic links between subunits are consistent with the fact that mammalian hemoglobins form stable tetramers while the peptide chains of lamprey hemoglobin are only weakly associated. The different behavior of hemoglobin H and of normal hemoglobin upon oxygen uptake is briefly discussed in terms of allosteric effects.  相似文献   

14.
D D Schlereth  W M?ntele 《Biochemistry》1992,31(33):7494-7502
Using suitable surface-modified electrodes, we have developed an electrochemical system which allows a reversible heterogeneous electron transfer at high (approximately 5 mM) protein concentrations between the electrode and myoglobin or hemoglobin in an optically transparent thin-layer electrochemical (OTTLE) cell. With this cell, which is transparent from 190 to 10,000 nm, we have been able to obtain electrochemically-induced Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectra of both proteins. Clean protein difference spectra between the redox states were obtained because of the absence of redox mediators in the protein solution. The reduced-minus-oxidized difference spectra are characteristic for each protein and arise from redox-sensitive heme modes as well as from polypeptide backbone and amino acid side chain conformational changes concomitant with the redox transition. The amplitudes of the difference bands, however, are small as compared to the total amide I absorbance, and correspond to approximately 1% (4%) of the reduced-minus-oxidized difference absorbance in the Soret region of myoglobin (hemoglobin) and to less than 0.1% of the total amide I absorbance. Some of the bands in the 1560-1490-cm-1 spectral regions could be assigned to side-chain vibrational modes of aromatic amino acids. In the conformationally sensitive spectral region between 1680 and 1630 cm-1, bands could be attributed to peptide C = O modes because of their small (2-5 cm-1) shift in 2H2O. A similar assignment could be achieved for amide II modes because of their strong shift in 2H2O.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Cobalt myoglobins (Aplysia) have been reconstituted from apo-myoglobin (Aplysia) and proto-, meso-, and deutero-cobalt porphyrins. Each of them showed the 30--60 times lower oxygen affinity than those of the corresponding cobalt myoglobins (Sperm whale). Kinetic investigation of their oxygenation by the temperature-junp relaxation technique showed that the low oxygen affinity of cobalt myoglobin (Aplysia) is due to a large dissociation rate constant. the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of oxy cobalt myoglobin (Aplysia) is affected by the replacement of H2O with D2O, suggesting a possible interaction between the bound oxygen and the neighboring hydrogen atom. A low temperature photodissociation study showed that the product of photolysis of oxy cobalt myoglobin (Aplysia) gives an EPR spectrum different from that of the deoxy-cobalt myoglobin (Aplysia) and from that of the photolysed form of oxy-cobalt myogloin (Sperm whale). These observations suggest that in oxy-cobalt myoglobin (Aplysia) the bound oxygen might interact with amino acid adjacent to it, but the interaction is weaker than that in oxy cobalt myoglobin (Sperm whale).  相似文献   

16.
The oxygenated form of myoglobin or hemoglobin is oxidized easily to the ferric met-form with generation of the superoxide anion. To make clear the possible role(s) of the distal histidine (H64) residue in the reaction, we have carried out detailed pH-dependence studies of the autoxidation rate, using some typical H64 mutants of sperm whale myoglobin, over the wide range of pH 5-12 in 0.1 M buffer at 25 degrees C. Each mutation caused a dramatic increase in the autoxidation rate with the trend H64V >/= H64G >/= H64L > H64Q > H64 (wild-type) at pH 7.0, whereas each mutant protein showed a characteristic pH-profile which is essentially different from that of the wild-type or native sperm whale MbO2. In particular, all the mutants have lost the acid-catalyzed process that can play a dominant role in the autoxidation reaction of most mammalian myoglobins or hemoglobins. Kinetic analyses of various types of pH-profiles lead us to conclude that the distal histidine residue can play a dual role in the nucleophilic displacement of O2- from MbO2 or HbO2 in protic, aqueous solution. One is in a proton-relay mechanism via its imidazole ring, and the other is in the maximum protection of the FeO2 center against a water molecule or an hydroxyl ion that can enter the heme pocket from the surrounding solvent.  相似文献   

17.
To find a simple criterion for the presence of the distal (E7) histidine residue in myoglobins and hemoglobins, the Soret magnetic-circular-dichroic spectra were examined for ferric metmyoglobins from various species. A distinct and symmetric dispersion-type curve was obtained for myoglobins containing the distal histidine, whereas a relatively weak and unsymmetric pattern was observed for myoglobins lacking this residue, such as those from three kinds of gastropodic sea molluscs, a shark and the African elephant. The magnetic-circular-dichroic spectra obtained would thus be a direct reflection of the presence or absence of a water molecule at the sixth coordinate position of the heme iron(III), this axial water ligand being stabilized by hydrogen-bond formation to the distal histidine residue. On the basis of these Soret magnetic-circular-dichroic signals, we also examined the structure of a protozoan myoglobin (or a monomeric hemoglobin) from Paramecium caudatum of particular interest for the evolution of these proteins from protozoa to higher animals.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of pH upon infrared spectra [CO stretching frequency (vco) region] and visible spectra of the CO complexes of soybean leghemoglobins a, c1, and c2, sperm whale myoglobin, and human hemoglobin A are reported. The vco for leghemoglobin--CO complexes was 1947.5 cm-1 at neutral pH. At acid pH myoglobin-- and hemoglobin--CO complexes developed vco bands at 1966--1968 cm-1, whereas leghemoglobin--CO complexes developed vco bands at approximately 1957 cm-1. All pKapp co values determined by pH-dependent variation of vco fell in the range 4.0--4.6. The pKapp co values determined from visible spectra were consistent with vco-determined values except for that of myoglobin--CO (visible pKapp co = 5.8). The pKapp co values in the 4.0--4.6 range appear to be pK values of the distal histidines, while the visible pKapp co of myoglobin--CO appears to be the pK of a group other than the distal and proximal histidines. The data are consistent with a model in which protonation of the distal histidine permits protein-free heme FeCO geometry in leghemoglobin--CO complexes but not in myoglobin-- or hemoglobin--CO complexes. Thus the heme pockets of leghemoglobins appear to be more flexible than the heme pockets of myoglobin and hemoglobin. The effects of pH upon visible spectra of the O2 complexes of soybean leghemoglobins a, c1, and c2, sperm whale myoglobin, and human hemoglobin A also are reported. pKapp o2 values of approximately 5.5 (leghemoglobins) and 4.4 (hemoglobin) are probably the pK values of the distal histidines. Comparisons of pKapp o2 values with pKapp co values indicate a more flexible heme pocket in leghemoglobins than in hemoglobin. The O2 complex of leghemoglobin c2 differed significantly from the O2 complexes of leghemoglobins a and c1 in visible spectra and titration behavior. These differences might be associated with the small structural differences in the region between the E and F helixes of leghemoglobins.  相似文献   

19.
Resonance Raman detection of bound dioxygen in cytochrome P-450cam   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have used resonance Raman spectroscopy and isotopic labeling techniques to unambiguously assign the dioxygen stretching frequency (vo-o) in the substrate-bound oxygenated complex of cytochrome P-450cam. The frequency found for Vo-o in the P-450cam system (1140 cm-1) is in remarkable agreement with recent studies of thiolate heme model compounds. The general features of the oxy-P-450cam Raman spectra are tabulated and comparisons are made with the oxy complexes of hemoglobin, myoglobin, and various model compounds. Most of the results are qualitatively explained by consideration of electron donation into the pi g (O2)/d pi (M) orbitals of the oxygenated complex (M = Fe or Co). It is also noted that the effect of the "extra" electron in the nitrogen base Co(II) oxy complexes, in some ways, parallels the effect of the lone pair electrons of thiolate in the oxy-P-450cam complex. This is evidenced by the enhanced resonance Raman activity of vo-o in both the Co(II) and P-450 systems as well as by the similarity of the vo-o frequencies.  相似文献   

20.
The substitution of iron for cobalt in the monomeric insect hemoglobin CTT (Chironomus thummi thummi) III does not alter the Bohr effect for O2-binding. The cobalt substitution in this hemoglobin allows us to identify not only the O-O and Co-O2 stretching mode but also the Co-O-O bending mode by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The assignments were made via 16O2/18O2 isotope exchange. The modes associated with the Co-O-O moiety are pH-dependent. These pH-induced changes of the resonance Raman spectra are correlated with the t = r conformation transition. At high pH (high-affinity state) two unperturbed O-O stretching modes are observed at 1,068 cm-1 (major component) and 1,093 cm-1 (minor component) for the 18O2 complex. These frequencies correspond to split modes at 1,107 cm-1 and 1,136 cm-1 and an unperturbed mode at approximately 1,153 cm-1 for the 16O2 complex. At low pH (low-affinity state) the minor component becomes the major component and vice versa. The Co-O2 stretching frequency varies for approximately 520 cm-1 (pH 5.5) to 537 cm-1 (pH 9.5) indicating a stronger (hence shorter) Co-O2 bond in the high-affinity state. On the other hand, the O-O bond is weakened upon the conversion of the low- to the high-affinity state. The Co-O-O bending mode changes from 390 cm-1 (pH 9.5) to 374 cm-1 (pH 5.5). In the deoxy form the resonance Raman spectra are essentially pH-insensitive except for a vinyl mode at 414 cm-1 (pH 5.5), which is shifted to 416 cm-1 (pH 5.5).  相似文献   

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