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1.
We use laser flash photolysis and time-resolved Raman spectroscopy of CO-bound H93G myoglobin (Mb) mutants to study the influence of the proximal ligand on the CO rebinding kinetics. In H93G mutants, where the proximal linkage with the protein is eliminated and the heme can bind exogenous ligands (e.g., imidazole, 4-bromoimidazole, pyridine, or dibromopyridine), we observe significant effects on the CO rebinding kinetics in the 10 ns to 10 ms time window. Resonance Raman spectra of the various H93G Mb complexes are also presented to aid in the interpretation of the kinetic results. For CO-bound H93G(dibromopyridine), we observe a rapid large-amplitude geminate phase with a fundamental CO rebinding rate that is approximately 45 times faster than for wild-type MbCO at 293 K. The absence of an iron proximal ligand vibrational mode in the 10 ns photoproduct Raman spectrum of CO-bound H93G(dibromopyridine) supports the hypothesis that proximal ligation has a significant influence on the kinetics of diatomic ligand binding to the heme.  相似文献   

2.
Kitagawa T  Haruta N  Mizutani Y 《Biopolymers》2002,67(4-5):207-213
A localized small structural change is converted to a higher order conformational change of protein and extends to a mesoscopic scale to induce a physiological function. To understand such features of protein, ultrafast dynamics of myoglobin (Mb) following photolysis of carbon monoxide were investigated. Recent results are summarized here with a stress on structural and vibrational energy relaxation. The core expansion of heme takes place within 2 ps but the out of plane displacement of the heme iron and the accompanying protein conformational change occur in 10 and 100 s of the picosecond regimes, respectively. Unexpectedly, it was found from UV resonance Raman spectra that Trp7 in the N-terminal region and Tyr151 in the C-terminal region undergo appreciable structural changes upon ligand binding-dissociation while Tyr104, Tyr146, and Trp14 do not. Because of the communication between the movements of these surface residues and the heme iron, the rate of spectral change of the iron-histidine (Fe- His) stretching band after CO photodissociation is influenced by the viscosity of solvent. Temporal changes of the anti-Stokes Raman intensity demonstrated immediate generation of vibrationally excited heme upon photodissociation and its decay with a time constant of 1-2 ps.  相似文献   

3.
Dynamics of dioxygen and carbon monoxide binding to soybean leghemoglobin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The association of dioxygen and carbon monoxide to soybean leghemoglobin (Lb) has been studied by laser flash photolysis at temperatures from 10 to 320 K and times from 50 ns to 100 s. Infrared spectra of the bound and the photodissociated state were investigated between 10 and 20 K. The general features of the binding process in leghemoglobin are similar to the ones found in myoglobin. Below about 200 K, the photodissociated ligands stay in the heme pocket and rebinding is not exponential in time, implying a distributed enthalpy barrier between pocket and heme. At around 300 K, ligands migrate from the solvent through the protein to the heme pocket, and a steady state is set up between the ligands in the solvent and in the heme pocket. The association rate, lambda on, is mainly controlled by the final binding step at the heme, the bond formation with the heme iron. Differences between Lb and other heme proteins show up in the details of the various steps. The faster association rate in Lb compared to sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) is due to a faster bond formation. The migration from the solvent to the heme pocket is much faster in Lb than in Mb. The low-temperature binding (B----A) and the infrared spectra of CO in the bound state A and the photodissociated state B are essentially solvent-independent in Mb, but depend strongly on solvent in Lb. These features can be correlated with the x-ray structure.  相似文献   

4.
The role of the proximal heme iron ligand in activation of hydrogen peroxide and control of spin state and coordination number in heme proteins is not yet well understood. Although there are several examples of amino acid sidechains with oxygen atoms which can act as potential heme iron ligands, the occurrence of protein-derived oxygen donor ligation in natural protein systems is quite rare. The sperm whale myoglobin cavity mutant H93G Mb (D. Barrick, Biochemistry 33 (1994) 6546) has its proximal histidine ligand replaced by glycine, a mutation which leaves an open cavity capable of accommodation of a variety of unnatural potential proximal ligands. This provides a convenient system for studying ligand-protein interactions. Molecular modeling of the proximal cavity in the active site of H93G Mb indicates that the cavity is of sufficient size to accommodate benzoate and phenolate in conformations that allow their oxygen atoms to come within binding distance of the heme iron. In addition, benzoate may occupy the cavity in an orientation which allows one carboxylate oxygen atom to ligate to the heme iron while the other carboxylate oxygen is within hydrogen bonding distance of serine 92. The ferric phenolate and benzoate complexes have been prepared and characterized by UV-visible and MCD spectroscopies. The benzoate adduct shows characteristics of a six-coordinate high-spin complex. To our knowledge, this is the first known example of a six-coordinate high-spin heme complex with an anionic oxygen donor proximal ligand. The benzoate ligand is displaced at alkaline pH and upon reaction with hydrogen peroxide. The phenolate adduct of H93G Mb is a five-coordinate high-spin complex whose UV-visible and MCD spectra are distinct from those of the histidine 93 to tyrosine (H93Y Mb) mutant of sperm whale myoglobin. The phenolate adduct is stable at alkaline pH and exhibits a reduced reactivity with hydrogen peroxide relative to that of both native ferric myoglobin, and the exogenous ligand-free derivative of ferric H93G Mb. These observations indicate that the identity of the proximal oxygen donor ligand has an important influence on both the heme iron coordination number and the reactivity of the complex with hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
Visible and near infrared magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of heme proteins and enzymes as well as those of a protein-free heme bound to 2-methylimidazole were recorded and compared at 4.2 K in unrelaxed metastable and relaxed equilibrium heme stereochemistry. The relaxed and unrelaxed stereochemistries of a 5-coordinate ferrous heme were generated by chemical reduction of iron at room temperature before freezing the sample and by photolysis of CO or O2 complexes at 4.2 K, respectively. The results are discussed in terms of a protein contribution into energies of the Fe-N epsilon(His) and Fe-N(pyrrols) bonds and their change on a ligand binding. We observed and analyzed cases of weak (myoglobin, hemoglobin) and strong (leghemoglobin, peroxidases) constraints imposed by the protein conformation on the proximal heme stereochemistry by comparing the bond energies in proteins with those in the protoheme-(2-methylimidazole) model compound. The role of a protein moiety in modulating the ligand binding properties of leghemoglobin and the heme reactivity of horseradish peroxidase is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Metmyoglobin has been reduced at low temperature (below 100 K) using x-rays or by excitation of tris(2,2′,bipyridine)ruthenium(II) chloride with visible light. Upon reduction, an intermediate state is formed where the structure of the protein is very similar to that of metmyoglobin with the water molecule still bound to the heme iron, but the iron is II low spin. The nature of the intermediate state has been investigated with optical spectroscopy. The Qo and Qv bands of the intermediate state are split, suggesting that the protoporphyrin is distorted. The intermediate state undergoes a relaxation observed by a shifting of the Soret band at temperatures above 80 K. Above 140 K, the protein begins to relax to the deoxy conformation. The relaxation kinetics of the protein have been monitored optically as a function of time and temperature from minutes to several hours and from 150 K to 190 K. By measuring the entire visible spectrum, we are able to distinguish between electron transfer processes and the protein relaxation from the intermediate state to deoxy myoglobin. The relaxation has been measured in both horse myoglobin and sperm whale myoglobin with the relaxation occurring on faster time scales in horse myoglobin. Both the reduction kinetics and the relaxation show non-exponential behavior. The reduction kinetics can be fit well to a stretched exponential. The structural relaxation from the intermediate state to the deoxy conformation shows a more complex, dynamical behavior and the reaction is most likely affected by the relaxation of the protein within the intermediate state. Received: 30 June 1997 / Accepted: 6 November 1997  相似文献   

10.
Sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) and soybean leghemoglobin (Lba) are two small, monomeric hemoglobins that share a common globin fold but differ widely in many other aspects. Lba has a much higher affinity for most ligands, and the two proteins use different distal and proximal heme pocket regulatory mechanisms to control ligand binding. Removal of the constraint provided by covalent attachment of the proximal histidine to the F-helices of these proteins decreases oxygen affinity in Lba and increases oxygen affinity in Mb, mainly because of changes in oxygen dissociation rate constants. Hence, Mb and Lba use covalent constraints in opposite ways to regulate ligand binding. Swapping the F-helices of the two proteins brings about similar effects, highlighting the importance of this helix in proximal heme pocket regulation of ligand binding. The F7 residue in Mb is capable of weaving a hydrogen-bonding network that holds the proximal histidine in a fixed orientation. On the contrary, the F7 residue in Lba lacks this property and allows the proximal histidine to assume a conformation favorable for higher ligand binding affinity. Geminate recombination studies indicate that heme iron reactivity on picosecond timescales is not the dominant cause for the effects observed in each mutation. Results also indicate that in Lba the proximal and distal pocket mutations probably influence ligand binding independently. These results are discussed in the context of current hypotheses for proximal heme pocket structure and function.  相似文献   

11.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy and step-scan Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy have been used to identify the ligation state of ferrous heme iron for the H93G proximal cavity mutant of myoglobin in the absence of exogenous ligand on the proximal side. Preparation of the H93G mutant of myoglobin has been previously reported for a variety of axial ligands to the heme iron (e.g., substituted pyridines and imidazoles) [DePillis, G., Decatur, S. M., Barrick, D., and Boxer, S. G. (1994) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 116, 6981-6982]. The present study examines the ligation states of heme in preparations of the H93G myoglobin with no exogenous ligand. In the deoxy form of H93G, resonance Raman spectroscopic evidence shows water to be the axial (fifth) ligand to the deoxy heme iron. Analysis of the infrared C-O and Raman Fe-C stretching frequencies for the CO adduct indicates that it is six-coordinate with a histidine trans ligand. Following photolysis of CO, a time-dependent change in ligation is evident in both step-scan FTIR and saturation resonance Raman spectra, leading to the conclusion that a conformationally driven ligand switch exists in the H93G protein. In the absence of exogenous nitrogenous ligands, the CO trans effect stabilizes endogenous histidine ligation, while conformational strain favors the dissociation of histidine following photolysis of CO. The replacement of histidine by water in the five-coordinate complex is estimated to occur in < 5 micros. The results demonstrate that the H93G myoglobin cavity mutant has potential utility as a model system for studying the conformational energetics of ligand switching in heme proteins such as those observed in nitrite reductase, guanylyl cyclase, and possibly cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

Visible and near infrared magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of heme proteins and enzymes as well as those of a protein-free heme bound to 2-methylimidazole were recorded and compared at 4.2 K in unrelaxed metastable and relaxed equilibrium heme stereochemistry. The relaxed and unrelaxed stereochemistries of a 5-coordinate ferrous heme were generated by chemical reduction of iron at room temperature before freezing the sample and by photolysis of CO or O2 complexes at 4.2 K, respectively. The results are discussed in terms of a protein contribution into energies of the Fe-Nepslion(His) and Fe-N(pyrrols) bonds and their change on a ligand binding. We observed and analyzed cases of weak (myoglobin, hemoglobin) and strong (leghemoglobin, peroxidases) constraints imposed by the protein conformation on the proximal heme stereochemistry by comparing the bond energies in proteins with those inthe protoheme-(2-methylimidazole) model compound. The role of a protein moiety in modulating the ligand binding properties of leghemoglobin and the heme reactivity of horseradish peroxidase is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
This paper reports the first report of rapid, reversible direct electron transfer between a redox protein, specifically, horse myoglobin, and a solid electrode substrate in nonaqueous media and the spectroscopic (UV-vis, fluorescence, and resonance Raman) characterization of the relevant redox forms of myoglobin (Mb) in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). In DMSO, the heme active site of metmyoglobin (metMb) appears to remain six-coordinate high-spin, binding water weakly. Changes in the UV-fluorescence spectra for metMb in DMSO indicate that the protein secondary structure has been perturbed and suggest that helix A has moved away from the heme. UV-vis and RR spectra for deoxyMb in DMSO suggest that the heme iron is six-coordinate low-spin, most likely coordinating DMSO. Addition of CO to deoxyMb in DMSO produces a single, photostable six-coordinate CO adduct. UV-vis and RR for Mb-CO in DMSO are consistent with a six-coordinate low-spin heme iron binding His93 weakly, if at all. The polarity of the distal heme pocket is comparable to that of the closed form of horse Mb-CO in aqueous solution, pH 7. Direct electron transfer between horse Mb and Au in DMSO solution was investigated by cyclic voltammetry. Mb exhibits stable and well-defined electrochemical responses that do not appear to be affected by the water content (1.3-7.5%). The electrochemical characteristics are consistent with a one-electron, quasi-reversible, diffusion-controlled charge transfer process at Au. E degrees for horse Mb in DMSO at Au is -0.241+/-0.005 V vs. NHE. The formal heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant, calculated from delta E(p) at 20 mV/s, is 1.7+/-0.5 x 10(-4) cm/s. The rate, which is unaffected by the presence of 1.3-7.5% water, is competitive with that previously reported for horse Mb in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

14.
M R Thomas  S G Boxer 《Biochemistry》2001,40(29):8588-8596
Nitric oxide (NO) binds to the myoglobin (Mb) cavity mutant, H93G, forming either a 5- or 6-coordinate Fe--NO heme complex. The H93G mutation replaces the proximal histidine of Mb with glycine, allowing exogenous ligands to occupy the proximal binding site. In the absence of the covalently attached proximal ligand, NO could bind to H93G from the proximal side of the heme rather than the typical diatomic binding pocket on the distal side when the 5-coordinate complex forms. The question of whether NO binds on the distal or proximal side was addressed by (19)F NMR. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to introduce unique cysteine residues at the protein surface on either the distal (S58C) or proximal (L149C) side, approximately equidistant from and perpendicular to the heme plane of both wild-type and H93G Mb. The cysteine thiols were alkylated with 3-bromo-1,1,1-trifluoroacetone to attach a trifluoroacetyl group at the mutation site. (19)F NMR spectra of 5-coordinate, NO bound S58C/H93G and L149C/H93G double mutants depict peaks with line widths of 100 and 23 Hz, respectively. As fluorine peaks broaden with increasing proximity to paramagnetic centers, such as 5-coordinate Fe--NO, the (19)F NMR data are consistent with NO binding in the distal heme pocket of H93G, even in the absence of a sixth axial ligand. Additionally, (19)F NMR spectra are reported for deoxy, oxy, CO, met CN, and met H(2)O forms of the labeled cysteine mutants. These results demonstrate that the fluorine probes are sensitive to subtle conformational changes in the protein structure due to ligation and oxidation state changes of the heme iron in Mb.  相似文献   

15.
The influence of the heme iron coordination on nitric oxide binding dynamics was investigated for the myoglobin mutant H93G (H93G-Mb) by picosecond absorption and resonance Raman time-resolved spectroscopies. In the H93G-Mb, the glycine replacing the proximal histidine does not interact with the heme iron so that exogenous substituents like imidazole may coordinate to the iron at the proximal position. Nitrosylation of H93G-Mb leads to either 6- or 5-coordinate species depending on the imidazole concentration. At high concentrations, (imidazole)-(NO)-6-coordinate heme is formed, and the photoinduced rebinding kinetics reveal two exponential picosecond phases ( approximately 10 and approximately 100 ps) similar to those of wild type myoglobin. At low concentrations, imidazole is displaced by the trans effect leading to a (NO)-5-coordinate heme, becoming 4-coordinate immediately after photolysis as revealed from the transient Raman spectrum. In this case, NO rebinding kinetics remain bi-exponential with no change in time constant of the fast component whose amplitude increases with respect to the 6-coordinate species. Bi-exponential NO geminate rebinding in 5-coordinate H93G-Mb is in contrast with the single-exponential process reported for nitrosylated soluble guanylate cyclase (Negrerie, M., Bouzhir, L., Martin, J. L., and Liebl, U. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 46815-46821). Thus, our data show that the iron coordination state or the heme iron out-of-plane motion are not at the origin of the bi-exponential kinetics, which depends upon the protein structure, and that the 4-coordinate state favors the fast phase of NO geminate rebinding. Consequently, the heme coordination state together with the energy barriers provided by the protein structure control the dynamics and affinity for NO-binding enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
Elementary steps or geminate states in the reaction of gaseous ligands with transport proteins delineate the trajectory of the ligand and its rebinding to the heme. By use of kinetic studies of the 765-nm optical "conformation" band, three geminate states were identified for temperatures less than approximately 100 K. MbCO, which is accumulated by photolysis between 1.2 and approximately 10 K, was characterized by our previous optical and X-ray absorption studies [Chance, B., Fischetti, R., & Powers, L. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 3820-3829]. Between 10 and approximately 100 K, geminate states that are also identified that have recombination rates of approximately 10(3) s-1 and approximately 10(-5) s-1 (40 K). Thus, it is possible to maintain a steady-state nearly homogeneous population of the slowest recombining geminate state, Mb, by regulated continuous illumination (optical pumping). Both X-ray absorption and resonance Raman studies under similar conditions of optical pumping show that the heme structure around the iron in Mb is similar to that of MbCO. In both geminate states, the iron-proximal histidine distance remains unchanged (+/- 0.02 A) from that of MbCO while the iron to pyrrole nitrogen average distance has not fully relaxed to that of the deoxy state. In MbCO the CO remains close to iron but not bound, and the Fe...CO angle, which is bent in MbCO (127 +/- 4 degrees C), is decreased by approximately 15 degrees [Powers, L., Sessler, J. L., Woolery, G. L., & Chance, B. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5519-5523]. The CO molecule in Mb, however, has moved approximately 0.7 A further from iron. Computer graphics modeling of the crystal structure of MbCO places the CO in a crevice in the heme pocket that is just large enough for the CO molecule end-on. Above approximately 100 K resonance Raman studies show that this structure relaxes to the deoxy state.  相似文献   

17.
Neuroglobin (Ngb) is a newly discovered oxygen-binding heme protein that is primarily expressed in the brain of humans and other vertebrates. To characterize the structure/function relationships of this new heme protein, we have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to determine the structure of the heme environment in Ngb from mice. In the Fe(2+)CO complex, two conformations of the Fe-CO unit are present, one of which arises from an open conformation of the heme pocket in which the CO is not interacting with any nearby residue, and the other arises from a closed conformation where a positively charged residue near the CO group stabilizes the complex. For the Fe(2+)O(2) complex, we detect a single nu(Fe-OO) stretching mode at a frequency similar to that of oxymyoglobins and oxyhemoglobins of vertebrates (571 cm(-1)). Based on the Fe-C-O frequencies of the closed conformation of Ngb, a highly polar distal environment is indicated from which the O(2) off-rate is predicted to be lower than that of Mb. In the absence of exogenous ligands, a heme pocket residue coordinates to the heme iron, forming a six-coordinate complex, thereby predicting a low on-rate for exogenous ligands. These structural properties of the heme pocket of Ngb are discussed with respect to its proposed in vivo oxygen delivery function.  相似文献   

18.
A metastable state of myoglobin is produced by reduction of metmyoglobin at low temperatures. This is done either by irradiation with x-rays at 80 K or by electron transfer from photoexcited tris(2, 2'-bipyridine)-ruthenium(II) at 20 K. At temperatures above 150 K, the conformational transition toward the equilibrium deoxymyoglobin is observed. X-ray crystallography, Raman spectroscopy, and temperature-dependent optical absorption spectroscopy show that the metastable state has a six-ligated iron low-spin center. The x-ray structure at 115K proves the similarity of the metastable state with metmyoglobin. The Raman spectra yield the high-frequency vibronic modes and give additional information about the distortion of the heme. Analysis of the temperature dependence of the line shape of the Soret band reveals that a relaxation within the metastable state starts at approximately 120 K. Parameters representative of static properties of the intermediate state are close to those of CO-ligated myoglobin, while parameters representative of dynamics are close to deoxymyoglobin. Thus within the metastable state the relaxation to the equilibrium is initiated by changes in the dynamic properties of the active site.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of high pressure (0.1-3.4 gigapascal (GPa)) on the ferrous heme active sites of human adult hemoglobin, sperm whale myoglobin, and Glycera dibranchiata hemoglobin (Fraction II) were probed using resonance Raman and absorption spectroscopies. High-to-low spin transitions of the heme iron occur for hemoglobin, myoglobin, and Glycera hemoglobin at 0.35, 0.75, and 0.50 GPa, respectively, for the deoxy species. These interspecies differences result from variations in the composition of the hemepockets and/or their rigidity to pressure-induced volume changes. Heme active sites initially bound to CO or O2 exhibit distinctive behavior at high pressures. For all proteins studied, O2 apparently dissociates from the heme at only moderately high pressure, while CO remains bound to the heme moiety even at extreme pressures. The Raman spectra demonstrate the differences in the ligated and deoxy species at 3.4 GPa in the high frequency region. Discrete changes (i.e. iron spin-state transitions and dissociation of O2) occur that are commensurate with the collapse of the distal pocket, while continuous shifts in the absorption and Raman spectra are observed at pressures above those required for pocket collapse.  相似文献   

20.
M R Thomas  D Brown  S Franzen  S G Boxer 《Biochemistry》2001,40(49):15047-15056
Nitric oxide (NO) binds to the myoglobin (Mb) cavity mutant, H93G, forming either a five- or six-coordinate Fe-NO complex. The H93G mutation eliminates the covalent attachment between the protein and the proximal ligand, allowing NO to bind H93G possibly from the proximal side of the heme rather than the typical diatomic binding pocket on the distal side. The question of whether NO binds on the distal or proximal side was addressed by FTIR spectroscopy of the N-O vibrational frequency nuN(-O) for a set of Mb mutants that perturb the electrostatic environment of the heme pocket. Vibrational spectra of five- and six-coordinate MbNO complexes indicate that nu(N-O) shifts (by as much as 26 cm(-1)) to higher energies for the distal mutants H64V and H64V/H93G relative to the energies of wild-type and H93G MbNO, while nu(N-O) is not affected by the proximal side mutation S92A/H93G. This result suggests that NO binds on the distal side of heme in the five- and six-coordinate MbNO complexes of H93G. Additionally, values of the Fe-NO vibrational frequency nu(Fe-NO) as measured by resonance Raman spectroscopy are reported for the distal and proximal double mutants of H93G. These results suggest that nu(Fe-NO) is not very sensitive to mutations that perturb the electrostatic environment of the heme pocket, leading to the observation that nu(N-O) and nu(Fe-NO) are not quantitatively correlated for the MbNO complexes presented here. Furthermore, nu(N-O) and nu(Fe-NO) do not correlate well with equilibrium constants for imidazole binding to the five-coordinate MbNO complexes of the H93G double mutants. The data presented here do not appear to support the presence of pi-back-bonding or an inverse trans effect of NO binding in Mb mutants that alter the electrostatic environment of the heme pocket.  相似文献   

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