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1.
S H Lin  N T Yu  J Tame  D Shih  J P Renaud  J Pagnier  K Nagai 《Biochemistry》1990,29(23):5562-5566
Using an Escherichia coli gene expression system, we have engineered human hemoglobin (Hb) mutants having the distal histidine (E7) and valine (E11) residues replaced by other amino acids. The interaction between the mutated distal residues and bound carbon monoxide has been studied by Soret-excited resonance Raman spectroscopy. The replacement of Val-E11 by Ala, Leu, Ile, and Met has no effect on the v(C-O), v(Fe-CO) stretching or delta(Fe-C-O) bending frequencies in both the alpha and beta subunits of Hb, although some of these mutations affect the CO affinity as much as 40-fold. The strain imposed on the protein by the binding of CO is not localized in the Fe-CO bond and is probably distributed among many bonds in the globin. The replacement of His-E7 by Val or Gly brings the stretching frequencies v(Fe-CO) and v(C-O) close to those of free heme complexes. In contrast, the substitution of His-E7 by Gln, which is flexible and polar, produces no effects on the resonance Raman spectrum of either alpha- or beta-globin. The replacement of His-E7 of beta-globin by Phe shows the same effect as replacement by Gly or Val. Therefore, the steric bulk of the distal residues is not the primary determinant of the Fe-CO ligand vibrational frequencies. The ability of both histidine and glutamine to alter the v(C-O), v(Fe-CO), or delta(Fe-C-O) frequencies may be attributed to the polar nature of their side chains which can interact with bound CO in a similar manner.  相似文献   

2.
Cytoglobin (Cgb) and neuroglobin (Ngb) are the first examples of hexacoordinated globins from humans and other vertebrates in which a histidine (His) residue at the sixth position of the heme iron is an endogenous ligand in both the ferric and ferrous forms. Static and time-resolved resonance Raman and FT-IR spectroscopic techniques were applied in examining the structures in the heme environment of these globins. Picosecond time-resolved resonance Raman (ps-TR3) spectroscopy of transient five-coordinate heme species produced by the photolysis of carbon monoxide (CO) adducts of Cgb and Ngb showed Fe-His stretching (nu(Fe-His)) bands at 229 and 221 cm(-1), respectively. No time-dependent shift in the nu(Fe-His) band of Cgb and Ngb was detected in the 20-1000 ps time domain, in contrast to the case of myoglobin (Mb). These spectroscopic data, combined with previously reported crystallographic data, suggest that the structure of the heme pocket in Cgb and Ngb is altered upon CO binding in a manner different from that of Mb and that the scales of the structural alteration are different for Cgb and Ngb. The structural property of the heme distal side of the ligand-bound forms was investigated by observing the sets of (nu(Fe-CO), nu(C-O), delta(Fe-C-O)) and (nu(Fe-NO), nu(N-O), delta(Fe-N-O)) for the CO and nitric oxide (NO) complexes of Cgb and Ngb. A comparison of the spectra of some distal mutants of Cgb (H81A, H81V, R84A, R84K, and R84T) and Ngb (H64A, H64V, K67A, K67R, and K67T) showed that the CO adducts of Cgb and Ngb contained three conformers and that the distal His (His81 in Cgb and His64 in Ngb) mainly contributes to the interconversion of the conformers. These structural characteristics of Cgb and Ngb are discussed in relation to their ligand binding and physiological properties.  相似文献   

3.
HemAT-Bs is a heme-containing signal transducer protein responsible for aerotaxis of Bacillus subtilis. The recombinant HemAT-Bs expressed in Escherichia coli was purified as the oxy form in which oxygen was bound to the ferrous heme. Oxygen binding and dissociation rate constants were determined to be k(on) = 32 microm(-1) s(-1) and k(off) = 23 s(-1), respectively, revealing that HemAT-Bs has a moderate oxygen affinity similar to that of sperm whale myoglobin (Mb). The rate constant for autoxidation at 37 degrees C was 0.06 h(-1), which is also close to that of Mb. Although the electronic absorption spectra of HemAT-Bs were similar to those of Mb, HemAT-Bs showed some unique characteristics in its resonance Raman spectra. Oxygen-bound HemAT-Bs gave the nu(Fe-O(2)) band at a noticeably low frequency (560 cm(-1)), which suggests a unique hydrogen bonding between a distal amino acid residue and the proximal atom of the bound oxygen molecule. Deoxy HemAT-Bs gave the nu(Fe-His) band at a higher frequency (225 cm(-1)) than those of ordinary His-coordinated deoxy heme proteins. CO-bound HemAT-Bs gave the nu(Fe-CO) and nu(C-O) bands at 494 and 1964 cm(-1), respectively, which fall on the same nu(C-O) versus nu(Fe-CO) correlation line as that of Mb. Based on these results, the structural and functional properties of HemAT-Bs are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
We have obtained the oxygen-17 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of a variety of C17O-labeled heme proteins, including sperm whale (Physeter catodon) myoglobin, two synthetic sperm whale myoglobin mutants (His E7----Val E7; His E7----Phe E7), adult human hemoglobin, rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) hemoglobin, horseradish (Cochlearia armoracia) peroxidase (E.C. 1.11.1.7) isoenzymes A and C, and Caldariomyces fumago chloroperoxidase (E.C. 1.11.1.10), in some cases as a function of pH, and have determined their isotropic 17O NMR chemical shifts, delta i, and spin-lattice relaxation times, T1. We have also obtained similar results on a picket fence prophyrin, [5,10,15,20-tetrakis(alpha, alpha, alpha, alpha, alpha-pivalamidophenyl)porphyrinato]iron(II) (1-MeIm)CO, both in solution and in the solid state. Our results show an excellent correlation between the infrared C-O vibrational frequencies, v(C-O), and delta i, between v(C-O) and the 17O nuclear quadrupole coupling constant (e2qQ/h, derived from T1), and as expected between e2qQ/h and delta i. Taken together with the work of others on the 13C NMR of 13CO-labeled proteins, where we find an excellent correlation between delta i(13C) and v(Fe-C), our results suggest that IR and NMR measurements reflect the same interaction, which is thought to be primarily the degree of pi-back-bonding from Fe d to CO pi* orbitals, as outlined previously [Li, X.-Y., & Spiro, T.G. (1988) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 110, 6024]. The modulation of this interaction by the local charge field of the distal heme residue (histidine, glutamine, arginine, and possibly lysine) in a variety of species and mutants, as reflected in the NMR and IR measurements, is discussed, as is the effect of cysteine as the proximal heme ligand.  相似文献   

5.
Rates for the reaction of nitric oxide with several ferric heme proteins and model compounds have been measured. The NO combination rates are markedly affected by the presence or absence of distal histidine. Elephant myoglobin in which the E7 distal histidine has been replaced by glutamine reacts with NO 500-1000 times faster than do the native hemoglobins or myoglobins. By contrast, there is no difference in the CO combination rate constants of sperm whale and elephant myoglobins. Studies on ferric model compounds for the R and T states of hemoglobin indicate that their NO combination rate constants are similar to those observed for the combination of CO with the corresponding ferro derivatives. The last observation suggests that the presence of an axial water molecule at the ligand binding site of ferric hemoglobin A prevents it from exhibiting significant cooperativity in its reactions with NO.  相似文献   

6.
J Ramsden  T G Spiro 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3125-3128
The resonance Raman band assigned to Fe--CO stretching in the sperm whale myoglobin CO adduct shifts from 507 cm-1 at neutral pH to 488 cm-1 at low pH, in concert with a shift of the C-O stretching infrared band from 1947 to 1967 cm-1 (Fuchsman & Appleby, 1979), while the 575-cm-1 Fe-C-O bending RR band loses intensity. The pKa that characterizes these changes is approximately 4.4. The vibrational frequencies at low pH are well modeled by the protein-free CO, imidazole adduct of protoheme in a nonpolar solvent while those at high pH are modeled by the adduct of a heme with a covalent strap (Yu et al., 1983) which inhibits upright CO binding. It is inferred that the Fe-C-O unit changes from a tilted to an upright geometry when the distal histidine is protonated, because its side chain swings out of the heme pocket due to electrostatic repulsion with a nearby arginine residue. A different protonation step (pKa = 5.7), which has been shown to modulate the CO rebinding kinetics (Doster et al., 1982) as well as the optical spectrum (Fuchsman & Appleby, 1979), is suggested to involve a global structure change associated with protonation of histidine residues distant from the heme.  相似文献   

7.
The resonance Raman spectra of met-, deoxy-, and (carbonmonoxy)myoglobin (MbCO) are studied as a function of amino acid replacement at the distal histidine-E7 position. The synthetic wild type is found to be spectroscopically identical with the native material. The methionine and glycine replacements do not affect the met or deoxy spectra but do lead to distinct changes in the nu Fe-CO region of the MbCO spectrum. The native MbCO displays a pH-dependent population redistribution of the nu Fe-CO modes, while the analogous population in the mutant systems is found to be pH independent. This indicates that histidine-E7 is the titratable group in native MbCO. Moreover, the pH dependence of the population dynamics is found to be inconsistent with a simple two-state Henderson-Hasselbalch analysis. Instead, we suggest a four-state model involving the coupling of histidine protonation and conformational change. Within this model, the pK of the distal histidine is found to be 6.0 in the "open" configuration and 3.8 in the "closed" conformation. This corresponds to a 3 kcal/mol destabilization of the positively charged distal histidine within the hydrophobic pocket and suggests how protonation can lead to a larger population of the "open" conformation. At pH 7, the pocket is found to be "open" approximately 3% of the time. Further work, involving both IR and Raman measurements, allows the electron-nuclear coupling strengths of the various nu Fe-CO and nu C-O Raman modes to be determined. The slowly rebinding conformational state, corresponding to nu Fe-CO = 518 cm-1 (nu C-O = 1932 cm-1), displays unusually weak coupling of the Fe-CO mode to the Soret transition. Studies of the nu Fe-CO region as a function of temperature reveal that the equilibria between the conformational states are quenched in both the native and glycine mutant below the freezing point of the solvent. Unusual line narrowing of the nu Fe-CO modes at the phase transition is also observed in all samples studied. This line narrowing stands in marked contrast to the other heme Raman modes and suggests that Fe-CO librational motion and/or distal pocket vibrational (or conformational) excitations are involved in the line broadening at room temperature.  相似文献   

8.
We carried out the flash photolysis of oxy complexes of sperm whale myoglobin, cobalt-substituted sperm whale myoglobin, and Aplysia myoglobin. When the optical absorption spectral changes associated with the O2 rebinding were monitored on the nanosecond to millisecond time scale, we found that the transient spectra of the O2 photoproduct of sperm whale myoglobin were significantly different from the static spectra of deoxy form. This was sharply contrasted with the observations that the spectra of the CO photoproduct of sperm whale myoglobin and of the O2 photoproducts of cobalt-substituted sperm whale myoglobin and Aplysia myoglobin are identical to the corresponding spectra of their deoxy forms. These results led us to suggest the presence of a fairly stable transient species in the O2 photodissociation from the oxy complex of sperm whale myoglobin, which has a protein structure different from the deoxy form. We denoted the O2 photo-product to be Mb*. In the time-resolved resonance Raman measurements, the nu Fe-His mode of Mb* gave the same value as that of the deoxy form, indicating that the difference in the optical absorption spectra is possibly due to the structural difference at the heme distal side rather than those of the proximal side. The structure of Mb* is discussed in relation to the dynamic motion of myoglobin in the O2 entry to or exit from the heme pocket. Comparing the structural characteristics of several myoglobins employed, we suggested that the formation of Mb* relates to the following two factors: a hydrogen bonding of O2 with the distal histidine, and the movement of iron upon the ligation of O2.  相似文献   

9.
KatG, the catalase peroxidase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is important in the activation of the antitubercular drug, isoniazid. About 50% of isoniazid-resistant clinical isolates contain a mutation in KatG wherein the serine at position 315 is substituted with threonine, KatG(S315T). The heme pockets of KatG and KatG(S315T) and their interactions with isoniazid are probed using resonance Raman (rR) spectroscopy to characterize their ferrous CO complexes. Three vibrational modes, C-O and Fe-C stretching and Fe-CO bending, are assigned using 12CO and 13CO isotope shifts. Two conformers are observed for KatG-CO and KatG(S315T)-CO. Resonance Raman features assigned to form I are consistent with it having a neutral proximal histidine ligand and the Fe-C-O moiety hydrogen bonded to a distal residue. The nu(C-O) band for form I is sharp, consistent with a conformationally homogeneous Fe-CO unit. Form II also has a neutral proximal histidine ligand but is not hydrogen bonded. This appears to result in a conformationally disordered Fe-CO unit, as evidenced by a comparatively broad C-O stretching band. The 13CO-sensitive bands assigned to form II are predominant in the KatG(S315T)-CO rR spectrum. Isoniazid binding is apparent from the resonance Raman signatures of both WT KatG-CO and KatG(S315T)-CO. Moreover, isoniazid binding elicits an increase in the form I population of wild-type KatG-CO while having little, if any, effect on the already low population of form I of KatG(S315T)-CO. Since oxyKatG (compound III) also contains a low-spin diatomic ligand-heme adduct (heme-O2), it is reasonable to suggest that it too would exist as a mixture of conformers. Because the small form I population of KatG(S315T)-CO correlates with its inability to activate INH, we hypothesize that form I plays a role in INH activation.  相似文献   

10.
The presence of at least two types of conformers in the ferrous CO complex of horseradish peroxidase has been demonstrated with the use of native and deuteroheme-substituted enzymes. Type I conformers, predominant in acidic pH, exhibited both an Fe-CO stretching and an Fe-C-O bending Raman line together with an infrared C-O stretch band below 1920 em-1. On the other hand, type II conformers, dominant species in alkaline pH, showed only an Fe-CO stretching Raman line with the C-O stretch above 1930 cm-1. They were interconvertible either by the changes in pH or by the binding of benzhydroxamate, a substrate for the enzyme. The pKa value for the pH-dependent interconversion of CO complex of deuteroheme-substituted enzyme was 8.3. These findings were interpreted to mean that the bound CO molecule in type I conformers was more tilted over the heme-plane than that in type II conformers. A steric hindrance by the bound substrate or the protonated form of a distal amino acid residue, presumably of histidine, is considered to be the cause for the isomerization. By summarizing present and previous data on the vibrational frequencies of heme-carbonyl complexes, we found that there are inverse-linear relationships between the square of Fe-CO and that of C-O stretching frequencies, while squares of Fe-CO stretching and Fe-C-O bending frequencies were linearly correlated with each other. Also found is that the dissociation rate constant of CO molecule from heme-carbonyl complexes is a linear function of the Fe-CO stretching frequency. The significance of these results is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Three mutant proteins of sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) that exhibit altered axial ligations were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis of a synthetic gene for sperm whale myoglobin. Substitution of distal pocket residues, histidine E7 and valine E11, with tyrosine and glutamic acid generated His(E7)Tyr Mb and Val(E11)Glu Mb. The normal axial ligand residue, histidine F8, was also replaced with tyrosine, resulting in His(F8)Tyr Mb. These proteins are analogous in their substitutions to the naturally occurring hemoglobin M mutants (HbM). Tyrosine coordination to the ferric heme iron of His(E7)Tyr Mb and His(F8)Tyr Mb is suggested by optical absorption and EPR spectra and is verified by similarities to resonance Raman spectral bands assigned for iron-tyrosine proteins. His(E7)Tyr Mb is high-spin, six-coordinate with the ferric heme iron coordinated to the distal tyrosine and the proximal histidine, resembling Hb M Saskatoon [His(beta E7)Tyr], while the ferrous iron of this Mb mutant is high-spin, five-coordinate with ligation provided by the proximal histidine. His(F8)Tyr Mb is high-spin, five-coordinate in both the oxidized and reduced states, with the ferric heme iron liganded to the proximal tyrosine, resembling Hb M Iwate [His(alpha F8)Tyr] and Hb M Hyde Park [His(beta F8)Tyr]. Val(E11)Glu Mb is high-spin, six-coordinate with the ferric heme iron liganded to the F8 histidine. Glutamate coordination to the ferric iron of this mutant is strongly suggested by the optical and EPR spectral features, which are consistent with those observed for Hb M Milwaukee [Val(beta E11)Glu]. The ferrous iron of Val(E11)Glu Mb exhibits a five-coordinate structure with the F8 histidine-iron bond intact.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) KatG is a catalase-peroxidase that is thought to activate the antituberculosis drug isoniazid (INH). The local environment of Mtb KatG and its most prevalent INH-resistant mutant, KatG(S315T), is investigated with the exogenous ligands CO and NO in the absence and presence of INH by using resonance Raman, FTIR, and transient absorption spectroscopy. The Fe-His stretching vibration is detected at 244 cm(-)(1) in the ferrous forms of both the wild-type enzyme and KatG(S315T). The ferrous-CO complex of both enzymes exhibits nu(CO), nu(Fe-CO), and delta(Fe-C-O) vibrations at 1925, 525, and 586 cm(-)(1), respectively, indicating a positive electrostatic environment for the CO complex, which is probably weakly hydrogen-bonded to a distal residue. The CO geometry is nonlinear as indicated by the unusually high intensity of the Fe-C-O bending vibration. The nu(Fe(III)-NO) and delta(Fe(III)-N-O) vibrations are detected at 596 and 571 cm(-)(1), respectively, in the ferric forms of wild-type and mutant enzyme and are indicative of a nonlinear binding geometry in support of the CO data. Although the presence of INH does not affect the vibrational frequencies of the CO- and NO-bound forms of either enzyme, it seems to perturb slightly their Raman intensities. Our results suggest a minimal, if any, perturbation of the distal heme pocket in the S315T mutant. Instead, the S315T mutation seems to induce small changes in the KatG conformation/dynamics of the ligand access channel as indicated by CO rebinding kinetics in flash photolysis experiments. The implications of these findings for the catalytic mechanism and mechanism of INH resistance in KatG(S315T) are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The met-cyano complex of elephant myoglobin has been investigated by high field 1H NMR spectroscopy, with special emphasis on the use of exchangeable proton resonances in the heme cavity to obtain structural information on the distal glutamine. Analysis of the distance dependence of relaxation rates and the exchange behavior of the four hyperfine shifted labile proton resonances has led to the assignment of the proximal His-F8 ring and peptide NHs and the His-FG3 ring NH and the distal Gln-E7 amide NH. The similar hyperfine shift patterns for both the apparent heme resonances as well as the labile proton peaks of conserved resonances in elephant and sperm whale met-cyano myoglobins support very similar electronic/molecular structures for their heme cavities. The essentially identical dipolar shifts and dipolar relaxation times for the distal Gln-E7 side chain NH and the distal His-E7 ring NH in sperm whale myoglobin indicate that those labile protons occupy the same geometrical position relative to the iron and heme plane. This geometry is consistent with the distal residue hydrogen bonding to the coordinated ligand. The similar rates and identical mechanisms of exchange with bulk water of the labile protons for the three conserved residues in the elephant and sperm whale heme cavity indicate that the dynamic stability of the proximal side of the heme pocket is unaltered upon the substitution (His----Gln). The much slower exchange rate (by greater than 10(4] of the distal NH in elephant relative to sperm whale myoglobin supports the assignment of the resonance to the intrinsically less labile amide side chain.  相似文献   

14.
The unicellular protozoan Paramecium caudatum contains a monomeric hemoglobin (Hb) that has only 116 amino acid residues. This Hb shares the simultaneous presence of a distal E7 glutamine and a B10 tyrosine with several invertebrate Hbs. In the study presented here, we have used ligand binding kinetics and resonance Raman spectroscopy to characterize the effect of the distal pocket residues of Paramecium Hb in stabilizing the heme-bound ligands. In the ferric state, the high-spin to low-spin (aquo-hydroxy) transition takes place with a pK(a) of approximately 9.0. The oxygen affinity (P(50) = 0.45 Torr) is similar to that of myoglobin. The oxygen on- and off-rates are also similar to those of sperm whale myoglobin. Resonance Raman data suggest hydrogen bonding stabilization of bound oxygen, evidenced by a relatively low frequency of Fe-OO stretching (563 cm(-1)). We propose that the oxy complex is an equilibrium mixture of a hydrogen-bonded closed structure and an open structure. Oxygen will dissociate preferentially from the open structure, and therefore, the fraction of open structure population controls the rate of oxygen dissociation. In the CO complex, the Fe-CO stretching frequency at 493 cm(-1) suggests an open heme pocket, which is consistent with the higher on- and off-rates for CO relative to those in myoglobin. A high rate of ligand binding is also consistent with the observation of an Fe-histidine stretching frequency at 220 cm(-1), indicating the absence of significant proximal strain. We postulate that the function of Paramecium Hb is to supply oxygen for cellular oxidative processes.  相似文献   

15.
The milli-, micro-, and nanosecond rebinding kinetics of oxygen and carbon monoxide with myoglobin (Mb) from sperm whale, horse, and dog were studied as a function of pressure up to 2 kbar by means of a high pressure laser photolysis apparatus. The results were analyzed quantitatively in terms of a three-step reaction scheme, and activation volumes (delta V not equal to) for each step were determined from the pressure dependence of the rate constants. In the case of CO binding to Mb, the overall reaction volume delta V not equal to was negative, resulting from the rate-determining bond formation step. Activation volumes for O2 to the iron binding step as well as for the O2 diffusion step within the protein matrix were quite different among three Mb species, and it was suggested that activation volumes are very sensitive to the amino acid constituents around the ligand path channel.  相似文献   

16.
The absorption and resonance Raman spectra and the azide binding kinetics of ferric horse heart myoglobin (Mb) and mini myoglobin (a chemically truncated form of horse heart Mb containing residues 32-139) have been compared. The steady-state spectra show that an additional six-coordinated low-spin form (not present in entire horse heart Mb, which is purely six-coordinated high spin) predominates in mini Mb. The distal histidine is possibly the sixth ligand in this species. The presence of two species corresponds to a kinetic biphasicity for mini Mb that is not observed for horse heart Mb. Azide binds to horse heart Mb much more slowly than to sperm whale Mb. This difference may result from a sterically hindered distal pocket in horse heart Mb. In both cases, the rate constants level off at high azide concentrations, implying the existence of a rate-limiting step (likely referable to the dissociation of the axial sixth ligand). The faster rate constant of mini Mb is similar to that of sperm whale Mb, whereas the slower one is similar to that of entire horse heart Mb.  相似文献   

17.
L P Yu  G N La Mar  H Mizukami 《Biochemistry》1990,29(10):2578-2585
Two-dimensional 1H NMR methods have been used to assign side-chain resonances for the residues in the distal heme pocket of elephant carbonmonoxymyoglobin (MbCO) and oxymyoglobin (MbO2). It is shown that, while the other residues in the heme pocket are minimally perturbed, the Phe CD4 residue in elephant MbCO and MbO2 resonates considerably upfield compared to the corresponding residue in sperm whale MbCO. The new NOE connectivities to Val E11 and heme-induced ring current calculations indicate that Phe CD4 has been inserted into the distal heme pocket by reorienting the aromatic side chain and moving the CD corner closer to the heme. The C zeta H proton of the Phe CD4 was found to move toward the iron of the heme by approximately 4 A relative to the position of sperm whale MbCO, requiring minimally a 3-A movement of the CD helical backbone. The significantly altered distal conformation in elephant myoglobin, rather than the single distal E7 substitution, forms a plausible basis for its altered functional properties of lower autoxidation rate, higher redox potential, and increased affinity for CO ligand. These results demonstrate that one-to-one interpretation of amino acid residue substitution (E7 His----Gln) is oversimplified and that conformational changes of substituted proteins which are not readily predicted have to be considered for interpretation of their functional properties.  相似文献   

18.
Detailed comparisons of the carbon monoxide FTIR spectra and ligand-binding properties of a library of E7, E11, and B10 mutants indicate significant differences in the role of electrostatic interactions in the distal pockets of wild-type sperm whale myoglobin and soybean leghemoglobin. In myoglobin, strong hydrogen bonds from several closely related conformations of the distal histidine (His(E7)) side chain preferentially stabilize bound oxygen. In leghemoglobin, the imidazole side chain of His(E7) is confined to a single conformation, which only weakly hydrogen bonds to bound ligands. The phenol side chain of Tyr(B10) appears to "fix" the position of His(E7), probably by donating a hydrogen bond to the Ndelta atom of the imidazole side chain. The proximal pocket of leghemoglobin is designed to favor strong coordination bonds between the heme iron and axial ligands. Thus, high oxygen affinity in leghemoglobin is established by a favorable staggered geometry of the proximal histidine. The interaction between His(E7) and Tyr(B10) prevents overstabilization of bound oxygen. If hydrogen bonding from His(E7) were as strong as it is in mammalian myoglobin, the resultant ultrahigh affinity of leghemoglobin would prevent oxygen transport in root nodules.  相似文献   

19.
In this work we report the thermal behavior (10-300 K) of the Soret band lineshape of deoxy and carbonmonoxy derivatives of Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) and horse myoglobins together with their carbon monoxide recombination kinetics after flash photolysis; the results are compared to analogous data relative to sperm whale myoglobin. The Soret band profile is modeled as a Voigt function that accounts for the coupling with high and low frequency vibrational modes, while inhomogeneous broadening is taken into account with suitable distributions of purely electronic transition frequencies. This analysis makes it possible to isolate the various contributions to the overall lineshape that; in turn, give information on structural and dynamic properties of the systems studied. The optical spectroscopy data point out sizable differences between elephant myoglobin on one hand and horse and sperm whale myoglobins on the other. These differences, more pronounced in deoxy derivatives, involve both the structure and dynamics of the heme pocket; in particular, elephant myoglobin appears to be characterized by larger anharmonic contributions to soft modes than the other two proteins. Flash photolysis data are analyzed as sums of kinetic processes with temperature-dependent fractional amplitudes, characterized by discrete pre-exponentials and either discrete or distributed activation enthalpies. In the whole temperature range investigated the behavior of elephant myoglobin appears to be more complex than that of horse and sperm whale myoglobins, which is in agreement with the increased anharmonic contributions to soft modes found in the former protein. Thus, to satisfactorily fit the time courses for CO recombination to elephant myoglobin five distinct processes are needed, only one of which is populated over the whole temperature range investigated. The remarkable convergence and complementarity between optical spectroscopy and flash photolysis data confirms the utility of combining these two experimental techniques in order to gain new and deeper insights into the functional relevance of protein fluctuations.  相似文献   

20.
The reaction of cyanide metmyoglobin with dithionite conforms to a two-step sequential mechanism with formation of an unstable intermediate, identified as cyanide bound ferrous myoglobin. This reaction was investigated by stopped-flow time resolved spectroscopy using different myoglobins, i.e. those from horse heart, Aplysia limacina buccal muscle, and three recombinant derivatives of sperm whale skeletal muscle myoglobin (Mb) (the wild type and two mutants). The myoglobins from horse and sperm whale (wild type) have in the distal position (E7) a histidyl residue, which is missing in A. limacina Mb as well as the two sperm whale mutants (E7 His----Gly and E7 His----Val). All these proteins in the reduced form display an extremely low affinity for cyanide at pH less than 10. The differences in spectroscopy and kinetics of the ferrous cyanide complex of these myoglobins indicate a role of the distal pocket on the properties of the complex. The two mutants of sperm whale Mb are characterized by a rate constant for the decay of the unstable intermediate much faster than that of the wild type, at all pH values explored. Therefore, we envisage a specific role of the distal His (E7) in controlling the rate of cyanide dissociation and also find that this effect depends on the protonation of a single ionizable group, with pK = 7.2, attributed to the E7 imidazole ring. The results on A. limacina Mb, which displays the slowest rate of cyanide dissociation, suggests that a considerable stabilizing effect can be exerted by Arg E10 which, according to Bolognesi et al. (Bolognesi, M., Coda, A., Frigerio, F., Gatti, C., Ascenzi, P., and Brunori, M. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 213, 621-625), interacts inside the pocket with fluoride bound to the ferric heme iron. A mechanism of control for the rate of dissociation of cyanide from ferrous myoglobin, involving protonation of the bound anion, is discussed.  相似文献   

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