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1.
L J Parkhurst  D J Goss 《Biochemistry》1984,23(10):2180-2186
Oxygen and CO ligand binding kinetics have been studied for the hybrid hemoglobin (Hb) alpha (human):beta (carp), hybrid II. Valency and half-saturated hybrids were used to aid in the assignment of the conformations of both chains. In hybrid II, an intermediate S state occurs, in which one chain has R- and the other T-state properties. In HbCO at pH 6 (plus 1 mM inositol hexaphosphate), the human alpha-chain is R state and the carp beta-chain is T state. We have no evidence at this pH that the carp beta-chain ever assumes the R conformation. At pH 6, the human alpha-chain shows human Hb R-state kinetics at low fractional photolysis and T-state rates for CO ligation by stopped flow. At pH 7, the human-chain R-state rate slows toward a carp hemoglobin rate. The carp beta-chains, on the other hand, react 50% more rapidly in the liganded conformation than in carp hemoglobin, and while the human alpha-chains are in the R state, the two beta-chains appear to function as a cooperative dimer. In this hemoglobin, the chains appear to be somewhat decoupled near pH 7, allowing a sequential conformational change from the R state in which the beta-chains first assume T-state properties, followed by the alpha-chains. The rate of the R-T conformational change for the carp beta-chains is at least 300 times greater than that for the human alpha-chains. At pH 9, the R----T conformational transition rate is at least 200 times slower than that for human hemoglobin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The reduction of low-molecular-weight Cu(II) and Fe(III) complexes by soybean leghemoglobin alpha was characterized using both kinetic analysis and 1H-NMR experiments. Whereas Fe(III) (CN)6(3-) was reduced through an outer sphere transfer over the exposed heme edge, all other Cu(II) and Fe(III) complexes investigated were reduced via a site-specific binding of the metal to the protein. Reduction of all metal complexes was enhanced by decreasing pH while only Fe(III)NTA reduction kinetics were altered by changes in ionic strength. Rates of reduction for both Cu(II) and Fe(III) were also affected inversely by the effective binding constant of the metal chelate used. NMR data confirmed that both Cu(II)NTA and Fe(III)NTA were bound to specific sites on the protein. Cu(II) bound preferentially to distal His-61 and Fe(III) exerted its greatest effect on two surface lysine residues with epsilon proton resonances at 3.04 and 3.12 ppm. The Fe(III)NTA complex also had a mild but noticeable line broadening effect on the distal His-61 singlet resonance near 5.3 ppm. Like hemoglobin and myoglobin, leghemoglobin might function not only as an oxygen carrier, but also as a biological reductant for low-molecular-weight Cu(II) and Fe(III) complexes.  相似文献   

3.
L W Fung  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1975,14(11):2526-2535
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of human hemoglobins in water reveal several exchangeable protons which are indicators of the quaternary structures of both the liganded and unliganded molecules. A comparison of the spectra of normal human adult hemoglobin with those of mutant hemoglobins Chesapeake (FG4alpha92 Arg yields Leu), Titusville (G1alpha94 Asp yields Asn), M Milwaukee (E11beta67 Val yields Glu), Malmo (FG4beta97 His yields Gln), Kempsey (G1beta99 Asp yields Asn), Yakima (G1beta99 Asp yields His), and New York (G15beta113 Val yields Glu), as well as with those of chemically modified hemoglobins Des-Arg(alpha141), Des-His(beta146), NES (on Cys-beta93)-Des-Arg(alpha141), and spin-labeled hemoglobin [Cys-beta93 reacted with N-(1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)iodoacetamide], suggests that the proton in the important hydrogen bond between the tyrosine at C7alpha42 and the aspartic acid at G1beta99, which anchors the alpha1beta2 subunits of deoxyhemoglobin (a characteristic feature of the deoxy quaternary structure), is responsible for the resonance at -9.4 ppm from water at 27 degrees. Another exchangeable proton resonance which occurs at -6.4 ppm from H2O is a spectroscopic indicator of the deoxy structure. A resonance at -5.8 ppm from H2O, which is an indicator of the oxy conformation, is believed to originate from the hydrogen bond between the aspartic acid at G1alpha94 and the asparagine at G4beta102 in the alpha1beta2 subunit interface (a characteristic feature of the oxy quaternary structure). In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH 6.2 both the -6.4- and the -5.8ppm resonances are present but not the -9.4-ppm resonance. Upon the addition of inositol hexaphosphate to methemoglobin at pH 6.2, the usual resonance at -9.4 ppm is shifted to -10 ppm and the resonance at 6.4 ppm is not observed. In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH greater than or equal to 7.6 with or without inositol hexaphosphate, the resonance at -5.8 ppm is present, but not those at -10 and -6.4 ppm, suggesting that methemoglobin at high pH has an oxy-like structure. Two resonances (at -8.2 and -7.3 ppm) which remain invariant in the two quaternary structures could come from exchangeable protons in the alpha1beta1 subunit interface and/or other exchangeable protons in the hemoglobin molecule which undergo no conformational changes during the oxygenation process. These exchangeable proton resonances serve as excellent spectroscopic probes of the quaternary structures of the subunit interfaces in studies of the molecular mechanism of cooperative ligand binding to hemoglobin.  相似文献   

4.
Ni(II)-Fe(II) hybrid hemoglobins, alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ni)2 and alpha(Ni)2 beta(Fe)2 have been characterized by proton nuclear magnetic resonance with Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX (Ni-PP) incorporated in apoprotein, which serves as a permanent deoxyheme. alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ni)2, alpha(Ni)2 beta(Fe)2, and NiHb commonly show exchangeable proton resonances at 11 and 14 ppm, due to hydrogen-bonded protons in a deoxy-like structure. Upon binding of carbon monoxide (CO) to alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ni)2, these resonances disappear at pH 6.5 to pH 8.5. On the other hand, the complementary hybrid alpha(Ni)2 beta(Fe-CO)2 showed the 11 and 14 ppm resonances at low pH. Upon raising pH, the intensities of both resonances are reduced, although these changes are not synchronized. Electronic absorption spectra and hyperfine-shifted proton resonances indicate that the ligation of CO in the beta(Fe) subunits induced changes in the coordination and spin states of Ni-PP in the alpha subunits. In a deoxy-like structure, the coordination of Ni-PP in the alpha subunits is predominantly in a low-spin (S = 0) four-coordination state, whereas in an oxy-like structure the contribution of a high-spin (S = 1) five-coordination state markedly increased. Ni-PP in the beta subunits always takes a high-spin five-coordination state regardless of solution conditions and the state of ligation in the partner alpha(Fe) subunits. In the beta(Ni) subunits, a significant downfield shift of the proximal histidyl N delta H resonance and a change in the absorption spectrum of Ni-PP were detected, upon changing the quaternary structure of the hybrid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Cu(II)-Fe(II) hybrid hemoglobins were investigated by UV-vis, Q-band (35 GHz) EPR and resonance Raman spectroscopies. EPR results indicated that Cu-porphyrin in alpha-subunit within hybrid hemoglobin had either 5- or 4-coordination geometry depending on the pH conditions, while Cu-porphyrin in beta-subunit had only 5-coordination geometry at high and low pH values. These results were consistent with UV-vis absorption results. A new resonance Raman band appeared around 190 cm(-1), which was present whenever 5-coordinated Cu-porphyrin existed in Cu(II)-Fe(II) hybrid hemoglobins irrespective of the coordination number in Fe(II) subunit. This Raman band might be assigned to Cu-N(epsilon) (His) stretching mode. These results are direct demonstration of the existence of coordination changes of Cu-porphyrin in alpha-subunit within hybrid hemoglobin by shifting the molecular conformation from fully unliganded state to intermediately liganded state.  相似文献   

6.
G Viggiano  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1979,18(23):5238-5247
The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of human adult deoxyhemoglobin in D2O in the region from 6 to 20 ppm downfield from the proton resonance of residual water shows a number of hyperfine shifted proton resonances that are due to groups on or near the alpha and beta hemes. The sensitivity of these resonances to the ligation of the heme groups and the assignment of these resonances to the alpha and beta chains provide an opportunity to investigate the cooperative oxygenation of an intact hemoglobin molecule in solution. By use of the nuclear magnetic resonance correlation spectroscopy technique, at least two resonances, one at approximately 18 ppm downfield from HDO due to the beta chain and the other at approximately 12 ppm due to the alpha chain, can be used to study the binding of oxygen to the alpha and beta chains of hemoglobin. The present results using approximately 12% hemoglobin concentration in 0.1 M Bistris buffer at pD 7 and 27 degrees C with and without organic phosphate show that there is no significant line broadening on oxygenation (from 0 to 50% saturation) to affect the determination of the intensities or areas of these resonances. It is found that the ratio of the intensity of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm to that of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm is constant on oxygenation in the absence of organic phosphate but decreases in the presence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate or inositol hexaphosphate, with the effect of the latter being the stronger. On oxygenation, the intensities of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm and of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm decreases more than the total number of deoxy chains available as measured by the degree of O2 saturation of hemoglobin. This shows the sensitivity of these resonances to structural changes which are believed to occur in the unligated subunits upon the ligation of their neighbors in an intact tetrameric hemoglobin molecule. A comparison of the nuclear magnetic resonance data with the populations of the partially saturated hemoglobin tetramers (i.e., hemoglobin with one, two, or three oxygen molecules bound) leads to the conclusion that in the presence of organic phosphate the hemoglobin molecule with one oxygen bound maintains the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm but not the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm. These resluts suggest that some cooperativity must exist in the deoxy quaternary structure of the hemoglobin molecule during the oxygenation process. Hence, these results are not consistent with the requirements of two-state concerted models for the oxygenation of hemoglobin. In addition, we have investigated the effect of D2O on the oxygenation of hemoglobin by measuring the oxygen dissociation curves of normal adult hemoglobin as a function of pH in D2O andH2O media. We have found that (1) the pH dependence of the oxygen equilibrium of hemoglobin (the Bohr effect) in higher pH in comparison to that in H2O medium and (2) the Hill coefficients are essentially the same in D2O and H2O media over the pH range from 6.0 to 8.2...  相似文献   

7.
The hemoglobin of the Free-Tailed Bat Tadarida brasiliensis (Microchiroptera) comprises two components (Hb I and Hb II) in nearly equal amounts. Both hemoglobins have identical beta-chains, whereas the alpha-chains differ in having glycine (Hb I) or aspartic acid (Hb II) in position 115 (GH3). The components could be isolated by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography and separated into the globin chains by chromatography on carboxymethyl-cellulose CM-52. The sequences have been determined by Edman degradation with the film technique or the gas phase method (the alpha I-chains with the latter method only), using the native chains and tryptic peptides, as well as the C-terminal prolyl-peptide obtained by acid hydrolysis of the Asp-Pro bond in the beta-chains. The comparison with human hemoglobin showed 18 substitutions in the alpha-chains and 24 in the beta-chains. In the alpha-chains one amino-acid exchange involves an alpha 1/beta 1-contact. In the beta-chains one heme contact, three alpha 1/beta 1- and one alpha 1/beta 2-contacts are substituted. A comparison with other chiropteran hemoglobin sequences shows similar distances to Micro- and Megachiroptera. The oxygenation characteristics of the composite hemolysate and the two components, measured in relation to pH, Cl-, and 2,3-bis-phosphoglycerate, are described. The effect of carbon dioxide on oxygen affinity is considerably smaller than that observed in human hemoglobin, which might be an adaptation to life under hypercapnic conditions.  相似文献   

8.
N V Blough  H Zemel  B M Hoffman 《Biochemistry》1984,23(13):2883-2891
Flash photolysis is employed to investigate the kinetics of CO recombination to the ferrous chains of [Mn(II),Fe(II)] hemoglobin (Hb) hybrids. At low pH (6.6), Hb remains predominantly in the T quaternary state for the first two CO ligation steps, when binding to either the alpha chains or beta chains. At elevated pH, CO binding to the alpha chains produces a larger degree of T to R conversion than binding to the beta chains, in support of earlier equilibrium measurements. This study provides the full pH dependence of the CO binding rate constants for both alpha- and beta-Fe chains within the T state and at elevated values of pH gives the R-state rate constants for the monoliganded analogues. The data can be analyzed within the context of a two-state model for Hb cooperativity, but they give clear evidence for slow quaternary structure interconversion at the monoliganded level.  相似文献   

9.
Staphylococcus aureus pI258 CadC is an extrachromosomally encoded metalloregulatory repressor protein from the ArsR superfamily which negatively regulates the expression of the cad operon in a metal-dependent fashion. The metalloregulatory hypothesis holds that direct binding of thiophilic divalent cations including Cd(II), Pb(II), and Zn(II) by CadC allosterically regulates the DNA binding activity of CadC to the cad operator/promoter (O/P). This report presents a detailed characterization of the metal binding and DNA binding properties of wild-type CadC. The results of analytical ultracentrifugation experiments suggest that both apo- and Cd(1)-CadC are stable or weakly dissociable homodimers characterized by a K(dimer) = 3.0 x 10(6) M(-1) (pH 7.0, 0.20 M NaCl, 25.0 degrees C) with little detectable effect of Cd(II) on the dimerization equilibrium. As determined by optical spectroscopy, the stoichiometry of Cd(II) and Pb(II) binding is approximately 0.7-0.8 mol/mol of wild-type CadC monomer. Chelator (EDTA) competition binding isotherms reveal that Cd(II) binds very tightly, with K(Cd) = 4.3 (+/-1.8) x 10(12) M(-1). The results of UV-Vis and X-ray absorption spectroscopy of the Cd(1) complex are consistent with a tetrathiolate (S(4)) complex formed by four cysteine ligands. The (113)Cd NMR spectrum reveals a single resonance of delta = 622 ppm, consistent with an S(3)(N,O) or unusual upfield-shifted S(4) complex. The Pb(II) complex reveals two prominent absorption bands at 350 nm (epsilon = 4000 M(-1) cm(-1)) and 250 nm (epsilon = 41 000 M(-1) cm(-1)), spectral properties consistent with three or four thiolate ligands to the Pb(II) ion. The change in the anisotropy of a fluorescein-labeled oligonucleotide containing the cad O/P upon binding CadC and analyzed using a dissociable CadC dimer binding model reveals that apo-CadC forms a high-affinity complex [K(a) = (1.1 +/- 0.3) x 10(9) M(-1); pH 7.0, 0.40 M NaCl, 25 degrees C], the affinity of which is reduced approximately 300-fold upon the binding of a single molar equivalent of Cd(II) or Pb(II). The implications of these findings on the mechanism of metalloregulation are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Reactions of cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) with phosphonoformic acid (PFA), phosphonoacetic acid (PAA), and methylenediphosphonic acid (MDP) yield various phosphonatoplatinum(II) chelates which were characterized by phosphorus-31 NMR spectroscopy. The P-31 resonances for the chelates appear at 6–12 ppm downfield as compared to the uncomplexed ligands. All complexes exhibit monoprotic acidic behavior in the pH range 2–10. The chemical shift-pH profiles yielded acidity constants, 1.0 × 10−4, 1.5 × 10−4, and 1.3 × 10−6 M−1, for the PFA, PAA, and MDP chelates. In addition to the monomeric chelate, MDP formed a bridged diplatinum(II,II) complex when it reacted with cis-Pt (NH3)2(H2O)22+. The P-31 resonance for this binuclear complex appears at 22 ppm downfield from the unreacted ligand.

Rate data for the complexation reactions of the phosphonate ligands with the dichloroplatinum complex are consistent with a mechanism in which a monodentate complex is formed initially through rate-limiting aquation process of the platinum complex, followed by a rapid chelation. For the PFA and PAA complexes, initial binding sites are the carboxylato oxygens. Implications of the various binding modes of the phosphonates in relationship to their antiviral activities are discussed.  相似文献   


11.
Ni(II)-Fe(II) hybrid hemoglobins, in which hemes in either the alpha or beta subunit are substituted with Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX, have been prepared and characterized. Since Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX binds neither oxygen nor carbon monoxide, the oxygen equilibrium properties of the Fe subunit in these hybrid hemoglobins were specifically determined. K1 values, namely the equilibrium constants for the first oxygen molecule to bind to hemoglobin, agreed well for these hybrid hemoglobins with the K1 value of native hemoglobin A in various conditions. Therefore, Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX in these hybrid hemoglobins behaves like a permanently deoxygenated heme. Both Ne-Fe hybrid hemoglobins bound oxygen non-co-operatively at low pH values. When the pH was raised, alpha 2 (Fe) beta 2 (Ni) showed co-operativity, but the complementary hybrid, alpha 2 (Ni) beta 2 (Fe), did not show co-operativity even at pH 8.5. The light absorption spectra of Ni(II)-Fe(II) hybrid hemoglobins indicated that the coordination states of Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX in the alpha subunits responded to the structure of the hybrid, whereas those in the beta subunits were hardly changed. In a deoxy-like structure (the structure that looks like that observed in deoxyhemoglobin), four-co-ordinated Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX was dominant in the alpha (Ni) subunits, while under the conditions that stabilized an oxy-like structure (the structure that looks like that observed in oxyhemoglobin), five-co-ordinated Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX increased. The small change observed in the absorption spectrum of the beta (Ni) subunits is not related to the change of the co-ordination number of Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX. Non-co-operative binding of oxygen to the beta subunits in alpha 2 (Ni) beta 2 (Fe) accompanied the change of absorption spectrum in the alpha (Ni) subunits. We propose a possible interpretation of this unique feature.  相似文献   

12.
113Cd nuclear magnetic resonance of Cd(II) alkaline phosphatases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
113Cd NMR spectra of 113Cd(II)-substituted Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase have been recorded over a range of pH values, levels of metal site occupancy, and states of phosphorylation. Under all conditions resonances attributable to cadmium specifically bound at one or more of the three pairs of metal-binding sites (A, B, and C sites) are detected. By following changes in both the 113Cd and 31P NMR spectra of 113Cd(II)2 alkaline phosphatase during and after phosphorylation, it has been possible to assign the cadmium resonance that occurs between 140 and 170 ppm to Cd(II) bound to the A or catalytic site of the enzyme and the resonance occurring between 51 and 76 ppm to Cd(II) bound to B site, which from x-ray data is located 3.9 A from the A site. The kinetics of phosphorylation show that cadmium migration from the A site of one subunit to the B site of the second subunit follows and is a consequence of phosphate binding, thus precluding the migration as a sufficient explanation for half-of-the-sites reactivity. Rather, there is evidence for subunit-subunit interaction rendering the phosphate binding sites inequivalent. Although one metal ion, at A site, is sufficient for phosphate binding and phosphorylation, the presence of a second metal ion at B site greatly enhances the rate of phosphorylation. In the absence of phosphate, occupation of the lower affinity B and C sites produces exchange broadening of the cadmium resonances. Phosphorylation abolishes this exchange modulation. Magnesium at high concentration broadens the resonances to the point of undetectability. The chemical shift of 113Cd(II) in both A and B sites (but not C site) is different depending on the state of the bound phosphate (whether covalently or noncovalently bound) and gives separate resonances for each form. Care must be taken in attributing the initial distribution of cadmium or phosphate in the reconstituted enzyme to that of the equilibrium species in samples reconstituted from apoenzyme. Both 113Cd NMR and 31P NMR show that some conformational changes consequent to metal ion or phosphate binding require several days before the final equilibrium species is formed.  相似文献   

13.
We report an optical and EPR spectral study of three hemoglobins, Hb I, II, and III, from the gill of the clam Lucina pectinata. Hemoglobin I reacts much more avidly with hydrogen sulfide than do Hbs II and III. The proximal ligand to the heme iron of each hemoglobin is histidyl imidazole. The acid/alkaline transition of ferric Hb I occurs with pK 9.6; those of ferric Hbs II and III with pK 6.6 and 5.9, respectively. At their acid limits each ferric hemoglobin exists as aquoferric hemoglobin. Broadening of the g = 6 resonance suggests that the bound water enjoys great positional freedom. Ferric Hb I, at the alkaline limit (pH 11), exists as ferric hemoglobin hydroxide. Ferric Hbs II and III, at their alkaline limit (pH 7.5), each exist as equal mixtures of two species. The low spin species with optical maxima near 541 and 576 nm and g values of 2.61, 2.20, and 1.82, are identified as ferric hemoglobin hydroxide. The high spin species, with optical maxima near 486 and 603 nm and g values of 6.71, 5.87, and 5.06, resemble Dicrocoelium hemoglobin and hemoglobin MSaskatoon. Here we show that Hbs II and III resemble hemoglobin MSaskatoon in which a distal tyrosinate oxygen ligated to the ferric heme iron at alkaline pH is displaced by water at acid pH. The H2S product of ferric Hb I is identified as ferric hemoglobin sulfide.  相似文献   

14.
Binding of Zn(II) to the carbon monoxide complex of human hemoglobin was shown by equilibrium sedimentation and sedimentation velocity experiments at pH 7.0 to induce the dissociation of liganded tetramers to dimers but not to monomers. These results provide direct confirmation of previous kinetic and gel filtration experiments (R. D. Gray, (1980) J. Biol. Chem.255, 1812–1818) that Zn(II) binding to liganded hemoglobin produces a change in aggregation state of liganded hemoglobin.  相似文献   

15.
The S-2,2,2-trifluoroethyl residue (-SCH2CF3) has been incorporated into human hemoglobin, Hb4(SH)2, as a reporter group at Cys-beta 93 using a sequence of disulfide interchange reactions [F. C. Knowles (1981) Anal. Biochem. 110, 19-26]. The 19F NMR spectrum at 235.2 MHz of carboxyhemoglobin (COHb)4(SSCH2CF3)2 was a band 50 Hz wide at half peak height. Conversion of the carbon monoxide derivative to the ligand-free form was accompanied by a downfield shift of 125 Hz (0.53 ppm). Weighed aliquots of solutions of Hb4(SSCH2CF3)2 and (COHb)4(SSCH2CF3)2 were mixed, yielding solutions of known fractional saturation with carbon monoxide. An independent estimate of F of these samples was derived from the amplitudes of the resonance intensities in the 19F NMR spectra. These independent methods for determination of the value of F were not uniformly in agreement. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate the estimate of F derived from 19F NMR spectra was considerably less than the actual value. The discrepancies between the two independent methods for determining F can be explained by a preferred order of binding of carbon monoxide to the alpha-chains. The preference for binding to the alpha-chains was abolished by removing phosphates. A model for transmission of cooperative effects in hemoglobin was presented which accounted for the characteristic shape of the hemoglobin-oxygen dissociation curves as well as the chain heterogeneity revealed by 19F NMR experiments.  相似文献   

16.
X-band electron paramagnetic resonance (epr) spectra of the binary systems, BSA-copper(II) (1:1 and 2:1), and the ternary systems, BSA-Cu(II)-aminoacid (1:1:1), are described. In the binary system, two distinct epr features have been observed. One of the features (towards the low pH), showing broad and overlapping epr signals, has been attributed to non-specific bonding of copper(II) to the albumin and other feature (towards higher pH), showing sharp intense epr signals, has been attributed to the specific bonding. The change from non-specific to specific binding is favoured by increase in pH as well as by increase in protein concentration. Specific binding of copper(II) in BSA-Cu(II) has been suggested to be similar to that in HSA-Cu(II). Spectra of BSA-Cu(II)-aminoacid (1:1:1) show simultaneous presence of binary BSA-Cu(II) and ternary BSA-Cu(II)-aminoacid.  相似文献   

17.
Ferret erythrocytes contain two hemoglobins differing only by their alpha-chains. The primary structure of the common beta-chain has been previously described; the complete sequence of the two alpha-chains are reported in this paper. The globin chains were separated by ion-exchange chromatography; the alpha-chains (42 steps), their tryptic peptides as well as the prolyl-peptides were subjected to automatic liquid- and gas-phase Edman degradation. The two alpha-chains are very similar, differing at only one position (Asp15----Gly15). Comparison with human hemoglobin alpha-chain shows 16 and 17 exchanges, for alpha 1 and alpha II chains, respectively; two substitutions involve alpha 1/beta 1 contacts and one the heme contacts. A high degree of homology was noted when the alpha-chains were compared to the corresponding chains of other representatives of the Carnivora order.  相似文献   

18.
The interactions of phytic acid with Cu(II) and Zn(II) ions were examined as functions of metal ion concentrations and pH. Cu(II) ion-selective potentiometric and electron spin resonance (ESR) experiments provide strong evidence for the binding of Cu(II) ions to the phytic acid molecule at low pH (2.4–3.4) values. The relative stabilities of the copper and zinc phytates at low pH values were found to be very similar. For systems with metal ion:phytic acid molar ratios of 1:1–4:1 and 5:1–6:1 and pH values in the 3.4–5.9 and 3.4–5.0 ranges, respectively, Zn(II) ions were found to form complexes with phytic acid that were more stable than those of Cu(II) ions with phytic acid. The phytic acid molecule, however, was found to accommodate Cu(II) ions more readily than Zn(II) ions. For example, in systems containing equal amounts of Cu(II) and Zn(II) ions, 2 Zn(II) ions and 2, 3, 4, or 4.5 Cu(II) ions were found per phytic acid molecule depending upon metal ion:phytic acid molar ratios in the systems and pH. Total metal ion:phytic acid molar ratios and pH affected resultant metal ion solubilities and were factors influencing the effects of Zn(II) and Cu(II) ions on the binding of each other by phytic acid. Zn(II) and Cu(II) ions were observed to potentiate the binding of each other by phytic acid in some systems and compete with each other for phytate binding sites in others.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of exogenous Cu(II) with stable T-state Ni(II)- and Cu(II)-reconstituted hemoglobins has been studied. The relative binding affinities for the two human hemoglobin Cu(II) binding sites are found to be reversed in these hemoglobins relative to native iron(II) hemoglobin A. Nickel hemoglobin, modified by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), iodoacetamide, and carboxypeptidase A, is used to establish that the observed differences can be attributed to the protein quaternary conformation and not to the metal substitution. Magnetic interactions between the Cu(II) responsible for oxidation and the metal-heme center suggest that the Cu(II) is closer to the heme in T-state hemoglobin than R-state hemoglobin. This finding suggests a pathway for T-state heme oxidation which does not require the beta-93 sulfhydryl group, consistent with rapid Cu(II) oxidation for NEM-reacted deoxyhemoglobin.  相似文献   

20.
Griffith WP  Kaltashov IA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(33):10024-10033
Dynamics of bovine hemoglobin assembly was investigated by monitoring monomers/oligomers equilibria in solution with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Intensities of ionic signals corresponding to various protein species (tetramers, dimers, heme-deficient dimers, as well as apo- and holo-monomers) were used to estimate relative fractions of these species in solution as a function of pH. The fraction of folded protein for each observed species was estimated based on charge-state distributions of corresponding ionic species in the mass spectra. The cumulative numbers (averaged across the entire protein population) were in good agreement with circular dichroism data at the Soret band and in the far-UV region, respectively. The mass spectral data confirm that hemoglobin dissociation involves a step where heme is first lost from the beta-chain of the alpha beta-dimer to form a heme-deficient dimeric species. This dimer dissociates further to produce a holo-alpha-chain and an apo-beta-chain. The former is tightly folded into a comparatively compact structure at neutral pH, while the latter always exhibits significant backbone disorder. Acidification of the protein solution to pH 4 leads to partial heme dissociation and significant increase of the backbone flexibility in the alpha-chains as well. Complete dissociation of the heme from the alpha-chains at a pH below 4 coincides with the total disappearance of the dimeric and tetrameric hemoglobin species from the mass spectra. The experimental data provide strong evidence that binding of a partially unstructured apo-beta-chain to a tightly folded holo-alpha-chain to form a heme-deficient dimer is the initial step of hemoglobin assembly. Such binding locks the beta-chain in a highly ordered conformation, which allows for an efficient heme acquisition, followed by docking of two hemoglobin dimers to form a tetrameric form of the protein. The asymmetry of the roles of the two chains in the assembly process is surprising, given a rather high sequence homology (ca. 43%) and highlights functional importance of intrinsic protein disorder. The study also demonstrates a tremendous potential of mass spectrometry as an analytical tool capable of elucidating protein interaction mechanisms in highly heterogeneous systems.  相似文献   

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