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1.
The heme molecular structure of the met-azido form of the myoglobin from the shark Galeorhinus japonicus has been investigated by 1H NMR. A nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) was clearly observed among the heme peripheral side-chain proton signals of this complex, which undergoes thermal spin equilibrium between high-spin (S = 5/2) and low-spin (S = 1/2) states, and the NOE connectivities provided the assignment of the resonances from the heme C13(1)H2 and C17(1)H2 protons. Chemical shift inequivalence of these proton resonances not only provided information about the orientation of these methylene protons with respect to the heme plane, but also allowed characterization of the time-dependent build-up of the NOE between them, which yields the correlation time for the internal motion of the inter-proton vector. The relatively large mobility found for the C17(1)H2 group suggests that the carboxyl oxygen of the heme C17 propionate is not anchored to the apo-protein by a salt bridge. It has been shown that the ferric high-spin form of G. japonicus Mb possesses a penta-coordinated heme [Suzuki, T. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 914, 170-176; Yamamoto, Y., Osawa, A., Inoue, Y., Ch?j?, R. & Suzuki, T. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 192, 225-229] and that the conformation of both heme propionate groups is fixed with respect to the heme, as well as the apo-protein, by a salt bridge [Yamamoto, Y., Inoue, Y., Ch?j?, R. & Suzuki, T. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 189, 567-573]. Therefore the weakening or interruption of the interaction between the C17 propionate and His FG3 upon the changes of the coordination and spin state of the heme iron, during azide ion binding to ferric high-spin G. japonicus Mb, is attributed to the displacement of the FG corner of the apoprotein away from the heme C17 propionate group. A similar structural alteration has been revealed by X-ray structural analyses of unliganded and liganded forms of ferrous hemoproteins [Baldwin, J. & Chothia, C. (1979) J. Mol. Biol. 129, 175-220; Phillips, S.E.V. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 142, 531-554].  相似文献   

2.
The molecular structure of the active site of myoglobin from the shark, Galeorhinus japonicus, has been studied by 1H-NMR. Some hyperfine-shifted amino acid proton resonances in the met-cyano form of G. japonicus myoglobin have been unambiguously assigned by the combined use of various two-dimensional NMR techniques; they were compared with the corresponding resonances in Physter catodon myoglobin. The orientations of ThrE10 and IleFG5 residues relative to the heme in G. japonicus met-cyano myoglobin were semiquantitatively estimated from the analysis of their shifts using the magnetic susceptibility tensor determined by a method called MATDUHM (magnetic anisotropy tensor determination utilizing heme methyls) [Yamamoto, Y., Nanai, N. & Ch?j?, R. (1990) J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1556-1557] and the results were compared with the crystal structure of P. catodon carbonmonoxy myoglobin [Hanson, J. C. & Schoenborn, B. P. (1981) J. Mol. Biol. 153, 117-124]. In spite of a substantial difference in shift between the corresponding amino acid proton resonances for the two proteins, the orientations of these amino acid residues relative to the heme in the active site of both myoglobins were found to be highly alike.  相似文献   

3.
1H-NMR spectra of deoxy myoglobins (Mbs) from shark (Galeorhinus japonicus), horse, and sperm whale have been studied to gain insights into their active site structure. It has been demonstrated for the first time that nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) can be observed between heme peripheral side-chain proton resonances of these paramagnetic complexes. Val-E11 methyl and His-F8 C delta H proton resonances of these Mbs were also assigned from the characteristic shift and line width. The hyperfine shift of the former resonance was used to calculate the magnetic anisotropy of the protein. The shift analysis of the latter resonance, together with the previously assigned His-F8 N delta H proton resonance, revealed that the strain on the Fe-N epsilon bond is in the order horse Mb approximately whale Mb < shark Mb and that the hydrogen bond strength of the His-F8 N delta H proton to the main-chain carbonyl oxygen in the preceding turn of the F helix is in the order shark Mb < horse Mb < whale Mb. Weaker Feporphyrin interaction in shark Mb was manifested in a smaller shift of the heme methyl proton resonance and appears to result from distortion of the coordination geometry in this Mb. Larger strain on the Fe-N epsilon bond in shark Mb should be to some extent attributed to its lowered O2 affinity (P50 = 1.1 mmHg at 20 degrees C), compared to whale and horse Mbs.  相似文献   

4.
The 1H NMR characteristics of the high-spin metmyoglobin from the mollusc Aplysia limacina have been investigated and compared with those of the myoglobin (Mb) from sperm whale. Aplysia metMb exhibits a normal acid----alkaline transition with pK approximately 7.8. In the acidic form, the heme methyl and meso proton resonances have been assigned by 1H NMR using samples reconstituted with selectively deuterated hemins and in the latter case by 2H NMR as well. On the basis of the methyl peak intensities and shift pattern, heme rotational disorder could be established in Aplysia Mb; approximately 20% of the protein exhibits a reversed heme orientation compared to that found in single crystals. Three meso proton resonances have been detected in the upfield region between -16 and -35 ppm, showing that the chemical shift of such protons can serve as a diagnostic probe for a pentacoordinated active site in hemoproteins, as previously shown to be the case in model compounds. The temperature dependence of the chemical shift of the meso proton signals deviates strongly from the T-1 Curie behavior, reflecting the presence of a thermally accessible Kramers doublet with significant S = 3/2 character. Nuclear Overhauser effect, NOE, measurements on Aplysia metMb have provided the assignment of individual heme alpha-propionate resonances and were used to infer spatial proximity among heme side chains. The hyperfine shift values for assigned resonances, the NOE connectivities, and the NOE magnitudes were combined to reach a qualitative picture of the rotational mobility and the orientation of the vinyl and propionate side chains of Aplysia metMb relative to sperm whale MbH2O.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The ferric high-spin form of the myoglobin from the shark Galeorhinus japonicus, which possesses a Gln residue at the distal site instead of the usual His residue, has been studied by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Using the heme meso-proton (C5H, C10H, C15H and C20H) resonance shift as a diagnostic probe for identifying the coordination system of the iron center in ferric high-spin form of hemoprotein, it has been shown that G. japonicus metmyoglobin (metMb) possesses the pentacoordinated active site. The pH-dependence study of NMR spectra of G. japonicus metMb revealed the appearance of the hydroxyl form of metMb at high pH, indicating that the protein undergoes the transition between the acidic and alkaline forms. The pK value and the rate for this acid-alkaline transition in G. japonicus metMb were found to be approximately 10 and much less than 4 x 10(2) s-1, respectively. Since the pK value of the acid-alkaline transition for the pentacoordinated heme in Aplysia limacina metMb is 7.8 [Giacometti, G.M., Das Ros, A., Antonini, E. & Brunori, M. (1975) Biochemistry 14, 1584-1588] and that of the hexacoordinated heme in sperm whale metMb is 9.1 [Brunori, M., Antonini, E., Fasella, P., Wyman, J. & Rossi-Fanelli, A. (1968) J. Mol. Biol. 34, 497-504], the OH- affinity of the ferric heme iron does not appear to depend on its coordination system. The acid-alkaline transition rate in A. limacina metMb was reported to be much less than 1.5 x 10(2) s-1 [Pande, U., La Mar, G.N., Lecomte, J.T.J., Ascoli, F., Brunori, M., Smith, K.M., Pandey, R.K., Parish, D.W. & Thanabal, V. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 5638-5646] and therefore a slow transition rate may be unique to the pentacoordinated active site of Mb.  相似文献   

7.
The 1H NMR spectrum of the low-spin, cyanide-ligated ferric complex of the myoglobin from the mollusc Aplysia limacina has been investigated. All of the resolved resonances from both the hemin and the proximal histidine have been assigned by a combination of isotope labeling, spin decoupling, analysis of differential paramagnetic relaxation, and nuclear Overhauser (NOE) experiments. The pattern of the heme contact shifts is unprecedented for low-spin ferric hemoproteins in exhibiting minimal rhombic asymmetry. This low in-plane asymmetry is correlated with the X-ray-determined orientation of the proximal histidyl imidazole plane relative to the heme and provides an important test case for the interpretation of hyperfine shifts of low-spin ferric hemoproteins. The bonding of the proximal histidine is shown to be similar to that in sperm whale myoglobin and is largely unperturbed by conformational transitions down to pH approximately 4. The two observed conformational transitions appear to be linked to the titration of the two heme propionate groups, which are suggested to exist in various orientations as a function of both pH and temperature. Heme orientational disorder in the ratio 5:1 was demonstrated by both isotope labeling and NOE experiments. The exchange rate with bulk water of the proximal histidyl labile ring proton is faster in Aplysia than in sperm whale myoglobin, consistent with a greater tendency for local unfolding of the heme pocket in the former protein. A similar increased heme pocket lability in Aplysia myoglobin has been noted in the rate of heme reorientation [Bellelli, A., Foon, R., Ascoli, F., & Brunori, M. (1987) Biochem. J. 246, 787-789].  相似文献   

8.
Reconstitution of liver fluke (Dicrocoelium dendriticum) apo-hemoglobin with hemins selectively deuterated at specific positions has permitted the assignment of several heme resonances in the proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of the Met-aquo and Met-cyano forms of the holoprotein. It was established that in the Met-aquo form the meso protons resonate at positions characteristic of a six-co-ordinated in-plane iron. From this, we deduced that the Met-aquo species retains a bound water molecule at pH values as low as 4.5. The orientation of the proximal histidine imidazole ring with respect to the heme group in the cavity was determined through the identification of the heme methyl signals and the analysis of the hyperfine shift pattern in the Met-cyano hemoglobin proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum. Compared to sperm whale myoglobin, the heme appears to be rotated by 180 degrees about the alpha, gamma meso-axis. Protein isomers with the heme group in a reversed orientation were not detected, even shortly after reconstitution. In the Met-cyano form, the resonances most affected by the Bohr transition were shown to arise from the heme propionates.  相似文献   

9.
The aromatic regions in proton-decoupled natural abundance 13C Fourier transform nuclear magnetic resonance spectra (at 14.2 kG) of small native proteins contain broad methine carbon bands and narrow nonprotonated carbon resonances. Some factors that affect the use of natural abundance 13C Fourier transform NMR spectroscopy for monitoring individual nonprotonated aromatic carbon sites of native proteins in solution are discussed. The effect of protein size is evaluated by comparing the 13C NMR spectra of horse heart ferrocytochrome c, hen egg white lysozyme, horse carbon monoxide myoglobin, and human adult carbon monoxide hemoglobin. Numerous single carbon resonances are observed in the aromatic regions of 13C NMR spectra of cytochrome c, lysozyme, and myoglobin. The much larger hemoglobin yields few resolved individual carbon resonances. Theoretical and some experimental values are presented for the natural linewidths (W), spin-lattice relaxation times (T1), and nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOE) of nonprotonated aromatic carbons and Czeta of arginine residues. In general, the 13C-1H dipolar mechanism dominates the relaxation of these carbons. 13C-14N dipolar relaxation contributes significantly to 1/T1 of C epsilon2 of tryptophan residues and Czeta of arginine residues of proteins in D2O. The NOE of each nonprotonated aromatic carbon is within experimental error of the calculated value of about 1.2. As a result, integrated intensities can be used for making a carbon count. Theoretical results are presented for the effect of internal rotation on W, T1, and the NOE. A comparison with the experimental T1 and NOE values indicates that if there is internal rotation of aromatic amino acid side chains, it is not fast relative to the over-all rotational motion of the protein.  相似文献   

10.
Hyperfine shifted heme methyl carbon resonances of paramagnetic horse heart ferricytochrome c cyanide complex (Cyt-c(CN)) have been observed for the first time in the natural abundance 13C-NMR spectrum and assigned using 1H-13C heteronuclear chemical shift correlated spectroscopy (1H-13C COSY). Individual heme methyl carbon NMR signal assignment permits a direct comparison between the hyperfine shifts of heme methyl carbon and attached methyl proton resonances which provides a useful information on the delocalization mechanism of the unpaired spin from the pi-conjugated system of porphyrin ring into the peripheral methyl side chains.  相似文献   

11.
The nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) was used to investigate heme orientation and to obtain assignments for all resolved resonances in the 1H-NMR spectrum of met-cyano Chironomus thummi thummi monomeric hemoglobins III and IV (Hb III and Hb IV). The only non-heme resolved resonance was found to be from Phe-38 (CD1), and NOE dipolar connectivity between this resonance and the heme 5- and 8-methyls was used to establish the absolute orientation of the heme for each heme-insertion isomer present. The assignments of resonances and heme disorder permitted structural comparisons between the various components, including those due to a point mutation in Hb III. Finally, the characteristic differences of NOE patterns to amino-acid protons from substituents on heme pyrroles I and II formed the basis for assigning resonances and heme orientation relative to native Hb IV for deuterohemin-reconstituted Hb IV, for which there are no X-ray data available.  相似文献   

12.
Proton NMR spectra of a model of low-spin cyanide complexes of ferric hemoproteins indicate that two broad single-protein resonances from the axial imidazole can be resolved outside the diamagnetic spectral region. Upon deprotonation of the imidazole in the model, the upfield resonance shifts dramatically to higher field, suggesting that its position may reflect the degree of hydrogen bonding or proton donation of the imidazole. Met-cyano myoglobin reveals a pair of such broad peaks in the regions expected for an essentially neutral axial imidazole. In the cyano complexes of horseradish peroxidase and cytochrome c peroxidase, a pair of single-proton resonances are located which are assigned to the same imidazole protons on the basis of their linewidth and shift changes upon altering the heme substituents. The upfiled proton, however, is found at much higher field than in metMbCN. The upfield bias of this resonance is taken as evidence for appreciable imidazolate character for the axial ligand in these heme peroxidases.  相似文献   

13.
J H Bradbury  J A Carver 《Biochemistry》1984,23(21):4905-4913
In paramagnetic metmyoglobin, cyanomyoglobin (CNMb), and deoxymyoglobin, His-36 has a high pK (approximately 8), and the NMR titration behavior of the H-2 resonance is perturbed, due to the presence at low pH of a hydrogen bond with Glu-38, which is broken at high pH. The His-36 H-4 resonance shows no shift with pK approximately 8 because of two opposing chemical shift effects but monitors the titration of nearby Glu-36 (pK = 5.6). In diamagnetic derivatives [(carbon monoxy)myoglobin (COMb) and oxymyoglobin (oxyMb)], the titration behavior of His-36 H-2 and H-4 resonances is normalized (pK approximately 6.8). The very slight alkaline Bohr effect in sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) is interpreted in terms of the pK change of His-36 from deoxyMb to oxyMb and compensating pK changes in the opposite direction of other unspecified groups. In sperm whale COMb at 40 degrees C, the distal histidine (His-64) and His-97 have pK values of 5.0 and 5.9. The meso proton resonances remote from these groups do not show a titration shift, but the nearby gamma-meso proton (pK = 5.3) responds to titration of both histidines, and the upfield Val-68 methyl at -2.3 ppm (pK = 4.7) witnesses the titration of nearby His-64. At 20 degrees C, the latter resonance is reduced in size, and a second resonance occurs at -2.8 ppm, which is insensitive to pH and, hence, more remote from His-64. Both resonances arise from two conformations of Val-68 in slow equilibrium. In oxyMb at 20 degrees C, only the latter resonance is observed, presumably because of the steric restrictions imposed by the hydrogen bond between ligand and His-64 in oxyMb, which is not present in COMb. In oxyMb the pK of His-97 (5.6) is similar to that of the meso proton resonances (5.5) and to the pK of other pH-dependent processes, including the very small acid Bohr effect. It is likely that these processes are controlled by the titration of His-97.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The interproton nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) and paramagnetic dipolar relaxation rates for hyperfine-shifted resonances in the proton NMR spectra of sperm whale met-cyano sulfmyoglobin have led to the location and assignment of the proton signals of the heme pocket residue isoleucine 99 (FG5) in two sulfmyoglobin isomers. Dipolar relaxation rates of these protein signals indicate a highly conserved geometry of the heme pocket upon sulfmyoglobin formation, while the similar upfield direction of dipolar shifts for this residue to that observed in native sperm whale myoglobin reflects largely retained magnetic properties. Dipolar connectivity of this protein residue to the substituents of the reacted heme pyrrole ring B defines the stereochemistry of the puckered thiolene ring found in one isomer, with the 3-CH3 tilted out of the heme plane proximally. The chirality of the saturated carbons of pyrrole ring B in both the initial sulfmyoglobin product and the terminal alkaline product is consistent with a mechanism of formation in which an atom of sulfur is incorporated distally to form an episulfide across ring B, followed by reaction of the vinyl group to yield the thiolene ring that retains the C3 chirality.  相似文献   

15.
Side chain dynamics monitored by 13C-13C cross-relaxation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A method to measure (13)C-(13)C cross-relaxation rates in a fully (13)C labeled protein has been developed that can give information about the mobility of side chains in proteins. The method makes use of the (H)CCH-NOESY pulse sequence and includes a suppression scheme for zero-quantum (ZQ) coherences that allows the extraction of initial rates from NOE buildup curves.The method has been used to measure (13)C-(13)C cross-relaxation rates in the 269-residue serine-protease PB92. We focused on C(alpha)-C(beta) cross-relaxation rates, which could be extracted for 64% of all residues, discarding serine residues because of imperfect ZQ suppression, and methyl (13)C-(13)C cross-relaxation rates, which could be extracted for 47% of the methyl containing C-C pairs. The C(alpha)-C(beta) cross-relaxation rates are on average larger in secondary structure elements as compared to loop regions, in agreement with the expected higher rigidity in these elements. The cross-relaxation rates for methyl containing C-C pairs show a general decrease of rates further into the side chain, indicating more flexibility with increasing separation from the main chain. In the case of leucine residues also long-range C(beta)-C(delta) cross-peaks are observed. Surprisingly, for most of the leucines a cross-peak with only one of the methyl C(delta) carbons is observed, which correlates well with the chi(2) torsion-angle and can be explained by a difference in mobility for the two methyl groups due to an anisotropic side chain motion.  相似文献   

16.
D Marion  F Guerlesquin 《Biochemistry》1992,31(35):8171-8179
Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to assign the proton resonances of ferrocytochrome c553 from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenbourough at 37 degrees C and pH = 5.9. Only a few side-chain protons were not identified because of degeneracy or overlap. The spin systems of the 79 amino acids were identified by DQF-COSY and HOHAHA spectra in H2O and D2O. Sequential assignments were obtained from NOESY connectivities between adjacent amide, C alpha H, and C beta H protons. From sequential NH(i)----NH(i + 1) and long-range C alpha H(i)----NH(i + 3) connectivities, four stretches of helices were identified (2----8, 34----46, 53----59, 67----77). Long-range NOE between residues in three different helices provide qualitative information on the tertiary structure, in agreement with the general folding pattern of cytochrome c. The heme protons, including the propionate groups, were assigned, and the identification of Met 57 as sixth heme ligand was established. The dynamical behavior of the ring protons of the six tyrosines was analyzed in detail in terms of steric hindrance. The NMR data for ferrocytochrome c553 are consistent with the X-ray structure for the homologous cytochrome from D. vulgaris Miyazaki. On the basis of the secondary structure element and of observed chemical shift due to the heme ring current, a structural alignment of eukaryotic and prokaryotic cytochromes c is proposed.  相似文献   

17.
L B Dugad  X Wang  C C Wang  G S Lukat  H M Goff 《Biochemistry》1992,31(6):1651-1655
Chloroperoxidase, a glycoprotein from the mold Caldariomyces fumago, has been investigated in its ferric low-spin cyanide-ligated form through use of nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) spectroscopy to provide information on the heme pocket electronic/molecular structure. Spin-lattice relaxation times for the hyperfine-shifted heme resonances were found to be three times less than those in horseradish peroxidase. This must reflect a slower electronic relaxation rate for chloroperoxidase than for horseradish peroxidase as a consequence of axial ligation of cysteine in the former versus histidine in the latter enzyme. Isoenzymes A1 and A2 of chloroperoxidase show the largest chemical shift differences near the heme propionate on the basis of NOE measurements. This suggests that the primary structure differences for the two isoenzymes are communicated to the heme group through the ring propionate substituents. A downfield peak has been detected in chloroperoxidase with chemical shift, T1, and line width characteristics similar to those of the C epsilon-H proton of the distal histidine residue. The NOE pattern and T1's of the peaks in the 0.0 to -5.0 ppm upfield region are consistent with the presence of an arginine amino acid residue in the heme pocket near either the 1-CH3 or 3-CH3 group. Existence of catalytically important distal histidine and arginine amino acid residues in chloroperoxidase shows it to be structurally similar to peroxidases rather than to the often compared monooxygenase, cytochrome P-450. This result supports the earlier conclusions of Sono et al. [Sono, M., Dawson, J.H., Hall, K., & Hager, L.P. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 347-356].  相似文献   

18.
The conformation of two hexanucleotides, d(GGATCC) and d(GGm6ATCC), has been studied by proton nuclear magnetic resonance. Nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) measurements on d(GGATCC) are in agreement with a normal B form right-handed helical structure. The single- and double-strand resonances are in fast exchange on a proton NMR time scale. The exchange is observed to be slow for d(GGm6ATCC); up to the Tm, separate resonances are observed for each state, though above the Tm exchange becomes more rapid. The preferred orientation of the adenosine methylamino group (methyl cis to N1) hinders base-pair formation. At 0 degree C irradiation of the m6A-T imino proton gives an NOE to AH2, showing that base pairing is Watson-Crick. Intra- and interresidue NOEs show that the helix is right handed and in the B form. Comparing results on the two oligomers demonstrates that adenosine methylation induces little or no change in the conformation of the helix but reduces the Tm from 45 to 32 degrees C. All of the amino proton resonances, as well as the imino resonances, have been assigned. From NOE experiments on the unmethylated oligomer we have located the Watson-Crick and non-Watson-Crick adenosine amino protons. At 0 degree C these resonances show broadening due to rotation of the amino group, and their rotation is slightly slower than for the adjacent guanosine amino group, though both these amino groups have lifetimes of less than 10 ms at 0 degree C. The imino protons show normal behavior, disappearing from the spectra ca. 20 degrees C below the Tm.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Tuna ferricytochrome c has been used to demonstrate the potential for completely assigning 1H and 13C strongly hyperfine-shifted resonances in metalloprotein paramagnetic centers. This was done by implementation of standard two-dimensional NMR experiments adapted to take advantage of the enhanced relaxation rates of strongly hyperfine-shifted nuclei. The results show that complete proton assignments of the heme and axial ligands can be achieved, and that assignments of several strongly shifted protons from amino acids located close to the heme can also be made. Virtually all proton-bearing heme 13C resonances have been located, and additional 13C resonances from heme vicinity amino acids are also identified. These results represent an improvement over previous proton resonance assignment efforts that were predicated on the knowledge of specific assignments in the diamagnetic protein and relied on magnetization transfer experiments in heterogeneous solutions composed of mixtures of diamagnetic ferrocytochrome c and paramagnetic ferricytochrome c. Even with that more complicated procedure, complete heme proton assignments for ferricytochrome c have never been demonstrated by a single laboratory. The results presented here were achieved using a more generally applicable strategy with a solution of the uniformly oxidized protein, thereby eliminating the requirement of fast electron self-exchange, which is a condition that is frequently not met.  相似文献   

20.
We have directly observed the oxyferryl group of ferryl myoglobin by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The FeIV = O stretching vibration is observed at 797 cm-1 and confirmed by an 18O-induced isotopic shift to 771 cm-1. The porphyrin center-to-nitrogen distance of ferryl myoglobin is significantly less than that previously observed for horseradish peroxidase compound II, which also contains an FeIV = O heme. The FeIII-CN- stretch of myoglobin (FeIII) cyanide is observed at 454 cm-1, which shifts to 449 cm-1 upon substitution with [13C]cyanide.  相似文献   

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