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1.
2.
The time-resolved spectra of photoproducts from ligand photodissociation of oxyhemoglobin are measured in the Soret spectral region for times from 10 ns to 320 microseconds after laser photolysis. Four processes are detected at a heme concentration of 80 microM: a 38-ns geminate recombination, a 137-ns tertiary relaxation, and two bimolecular processes for rebinding of molecular oxygen. The pseudo-first-order rate constants for rebinding to the alpha and beta subunits of hemoglobin are 3.2 x 10(4) s-1 (31 microseconds lifetime) and 9.4 x 10(4) s-1 (11 microseconds lifetime), respectively. The significance of kinetic measurements made at different heme concentrations is discussed in terms of the equilibrium compositions of hemoglobin tetramer and dimer mixtures. The rebinding rate constants for alpha and beta chains are observed to be about two times slower in the dimer than in the tetramer, a finding that appears to support the observation of quaternary enhancement in equilibrium ligand binding by hemoglobin tetramers.  相似文献   

3.
In order to explore fully how ligand- and temperature-induced alterations in the spin states of heme iron are related to protein readjustments, the spin label 4-isothiocyanate (I) was covalently attached at beta-93 cysteines and at NH2-terminal valines of various heme-iron ligand forms of human hemoglobin. It was found that the mobility of NH2-terminally bound spin labels depends on the magnetic moment of the heme iron. There is a an approximately linear relationship between the magnetic moment of the heme iron and the mobility of NH2-terminally bound spin labels. In accordance with our previous results, the temperature dependence of ESR spectra of spin-labeled hemoglobin suggests the temperature-induced protein conformational change in those heme-iron ligand forms that are characterized by the equilibrium of the spin states of the heme iron. The conformational change was sensed at both spin-label-binding sites: at beta-93 cysteines and at NH2-terminal valines.  相似文献   

4.
Circular dichroism (CD) and optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) spectra of several liganded derivatives of the monomer and polymer hemoglobin components of the marine annelid, Glycera dibranchiata were measured over the wavelength range 650--195 nm. The differences observed between the monomer and polymer components for the heme dichroic bands in the visible, Soret and ultraviolet wavelength regions seem to result from changes in the heme environment, geometry and coordination state of the central heme iron in these proteins. Within the Soret region, the liganded derivatives of the monomer hemoglobin exhibit predominantly negative circular dichroic bands. The heme band at 260 nm is also absent for the monomer hemoglobin. The ORD and CD spectra in the far-ultraviolet, peptide absorbing region suggest also differences in the alpha-helix content of the monomer and polymer hemoglobins. The values for the single-chain G. dibranchiata hemoglobin are in the expected range (about 70% alpha-helix) as predicted by the X-ray structure of this protein. The lower estimates of the alpha-helix content for the polymer hemoglobin (approx. 50%), may reflect the differences in amino acid composition, primary structure and polypeptide chain foldings. Changes in oxidation state and ligand binding appears to have no pronounced effect on the helicity of either the monomer or polymer hemoglobins. The removal of the heme moiety from the monomer hemoglobin did result in a major decrease in its helix content similar to the loss of heme from myoglobin.  相似文献   

5.
Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance techniques were used to assign resonances corresponding to heme pocket residues of the isolated alpha(CO) subunits of the human adult hemoglobin (HbA). The assignment procedure was based on the partial identification of the amino acid spin system from the J-correlated (COSY) spectrum and on the nuclear Overhauser effect connectivities (from NOSEY spectra) with the heme substituents. We present here partial assignments corresponding to five amino acid residues: Leu86, Leu-91, Val-93, Leu-101 and Leu-136. Starting from the known crystallographic structure of the alpha subunit in the hemoglobin tetramer, we applied a dipolar model to compute the ring-current shift of the protons from fifteen amino acid residues in the heme pocket. Comparison of the predicted and observed chemical shifts suggests that there is a very close similarity between the heme pocket tertiary structure of the alpha(CO) subunits in crystals of HbA(CO) and of the free alpha(CO) chains. The one-dimensional NMR spectra were used to monitor the pH-induced structural changes, the effects of chemical modification and of ligand substitution. Upon increasing the pH from 5.6 to 9.0 the structure of the heme environment appears to be invariant with the exception of some residues in the CD corner. The structure is also largely conserved when p-chloromercuribenzoate is bound to Cys-104. In contrast, the substitution of CO by O2 as ligand induces many large changes in the heme cavity which can be partially characterized by NMR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

6.
The optical transient absorption spectra at 30 ps and 6.5 ns after photolysis are compared for both carboxy hemoglobin (HbCO) and carboxy myoglobin (MbCO). Both 355- and 532-nm excitation pulses were used. In all cases the shapes of the optical difference spectra thus generated are stationary over the complete time-scale studied. The photolysis spectra for MbCO are not significantly different from the equilibrium difference spectra generated on the same picosecond spectrometer when measured to an accuracy of +/- 0.5 nm. In addition, spectral parameters for delegated HbCO generated on the same spectrometer but detected by two different techniques, either by a Vidicon detector or point by point with photomultiplier tubes, are reported; the results are different from some of the previously reported picosecond experiments.  相似文献   

7.
Two-dimensional 1H-NMR methods have been used to assign side-chain resonances for the tryptophan residues and for several amino acids located in the heme pockets of the carbon monoxide complexes of the major monomeric hemoglobins from Glycera dibranchiata. The NMR spectra reveal a high degree of conservation of the heme pocket structure in the different hemoglobins. However some conformational differences are evident and residues at positions B10 and G8 on the distal side of the heme pocket are not conserved. From the present NMR studies it appears that the monomeric G. dibranchiata hemoglobin examined by X-ray crystallography [Padlan, E. A. & Love, W. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 4067-4078] corresponds to HbC. Except that the orientation of the heme in solution is the reverse of that reported in the crystal structure, there is a close correspondence between the heme pocket structure in the crystal and in solution. The proximal histidine coordination geometry is almost identical in the CO complexes of the three monomeric hemoglobins studied. Distal residues are strongly implicated in determining the observed kinetic differences in ligand binding reactions. In particular, steric crowding of the ligand binding site in hemoglobin A is probably a major factor in the slower kinetics of this component.  相似文献   

8.
FixL is a bacterial heme-based oxygen sensor, in which release of oxygen from the sensing PAS domain leads to activation of an associated kinase domain. Static structural studies have suggested an important role of the conserved residue arginine 220 in signal transmission at the level of the heme domain. To assess the role of this residue in the dynamics and properties of the initial intermediates in ligand release, we have investigated the effects of R220X (X = I, Q, E, H, or A) mutations in the FixLH heme domain on the dynamics and spectral properties of the heme upon photolysis of O(2), NO, and CO using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Comparison of transient spectra for CO and NO dissociation with steady-state spectra indicated less strain on the heme in the ligand dissociation species for all mutants compared to the wild type (WT). For CO and NO, the kinetics were similar to those of the wild type, with the exception of (1) a relatively low yield of picosecond NO rebinding to R220A, presumably related to the increase in the free volume of the heme pocket, and (2) substantial pH-dependent picosecond to nanosecond rebinding of CO to R220H, related to formation of a hydrogen bond between CO and histidine 220. Upon excitation of the complex bound with the physiological sensor ligand O(2), a 5-8 ps decay phase and a nondecaying (>4 ns) phase were observed for WT and all mutants. The strong distortion of the spectrum associated with the decay phase in WT is substantially diminished in all mutant proteins, indicating an R220-induced role of the heme in the primary intermediate in signal transmission. Furthermore, the yield of dissociated oxygen after this phase ( approximately 10% in WT) is increased in all mutants, up to almost unity in R220A, indicating a key role of R220 in caging the oxygen near the heme through hydrogen bonding. Molecular dynamics simulations corroborate these findings and suggest motions of O(2) and arginine 220 away from the heme pocket as a second step in the signal pathway on the 50 ps time scale.  相似文献   

9.
E W Findsen  P Simons  M R Ondrias 《Biochemistry》1986,25(24):7912-7917
The effects of protein dehydration upon the equilibrium and dynamic properties of the heme active site in human hemoglobin (HbA) have been probed by resonance Raman scattering. Spectra of equilibrium carbonmonoxy-HbA and the photolytic heme transient species generated within 10 ns of ligand photolysis have been obtained from thin films of protein in various stages of dehydration. These data provide detailed information concerning the response of the heme and its bonding interactions with both the proximal histidine and carbon monoxide as a function of protein hydration. For protein hydration levels of 0.4-1.0 g of H2O/g of protein, our results indicate that the C = O stretching mode of carbonmonoxy-HbA is dramatically affected by protein hydration levels, thus corroborating the infrared results of Brown et al. [Brown, W. E., Sutcliffe, J. W., & Pulsinelli, P. D. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 2914-2923]. However, we find that both heme skeletal modes and the Fe-C bond strength are largely insensitive to dehydration. Moreover, the proximal pocket geometry (as reflected in the behavior of the Fe-proximal histidine stretching mode) immediately following ligand photolysis was found to be very similar to that of R-state solution hemoglobin. At protein hydration levels below the theoretical monolayer limit, small changes in the resonance Raman spectra of both equilibrium HbCO and the transient heme species generated subsequent to ligand photolysis are detected. These include broadening of the Fe-C stretching mode in equilibrium HbCO and a small shift to lower frequency of the Fe-His mode in the photolytic transient species.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The time course of ligand recombination to the myoglobin from Aplysia limacina, which has Val(E7), was measured following photolysis by flashes of 35 ps to 300 ns with a time resolution of 10 ps or 1 ns. CO shows only biomolecular recombination. O2 has a small geminate reaction with a half-time of tens of picoseconds, but no nanosecond geminate reaction. NO has two picosecond relaxations with half-times of 70 ps (15%) and 1 ns (80%) and one nanosecond relaxation with a half-time of 4.6 ns. The biomolecular rates for O2 and NO are the same: 2 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. Methyl and ethyl isonitriles have a geminate reaction with a half-time of 35 ps. Ethyl isonitrile has, in addition, a nanosecond relaxation (25%) with a half-time of 100 ns. t-Butyl isonitrile has four geminate relaxations (10 ps, 35 ps, 1 ns, and 1 microseconds). Analysis of the results suggests much easier movement of ligand between the heme pocket and the exterior than in sperm whale myoglobin (His(E7]. The reactivity of the heme is little different, placing the effect of the differences from sperm whale myoglobin on the distal side of the heme.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Heroux MS  Mohan AD  Olsen KW 《IUBMB life》2011,63(3):214-220
The truncated hemoglobin of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mt-trHbO) is a small heme protein belonging to the hemoglobin superfamily. Truncated hemoglobins (trHbs) are believed to have functional roles such as terminal oxidases and oxygen sensors involved in the response to oxidative and nitrosative stress, nitric oxide (NO) detoxification, O?/NO chemistry, O? delivery under hypoxic conditions, and long-term ligand storage. Based on sequence similarities, they are classified into three groups. Experimental studies revealed that all trHbs display a 2-on-2 α-helical sandwich fold rather than the 3-on-3 α-helical sandwich fold of the classical hemoglobin fold. Using locally enhanced sampling (LESMD) molecular dynamics, the ligand-binding escape pathways from the distal heme binding cavity of Mt-trHbO were determined to better understand how this protein functions. The importance of specific residues, such as the group II and III invariant W(G8) residue, can be seen in terms of ligand diffusion pathways and ligand dynamics. LESMD simulations show that the wild-type Mt-trHbO has three diffusion pathways while the W(G8)F Mt-trHbO mutant has only two. The W(G8) residue plays a critical role in ligand binding and stabilization and helps regulate the rate of ligand escape from the distal heme pocket. Thus, this invariant residue is important in creating ligand diffusion pathways and possibly in the enzymatic functions of this protein.  相似文献   

14.
Femtosecond spectroscopy was performed on CO-liganded (fully reduced and mixed-valence states) and O(2)-liganded quinol oxidase bd from Escherichia coli. Substantial polarization effects, unprecedented for optical studies of heme proteins, were observed in the CO photodissociation spectra, implying interactions between heme d (the chlorin ligand binding site) and the close-lying heme b(595) on the picosecond time scale; this general result is fully consistent with previous work [Vos, M. H., Borisov, V. B., Liebl, U., Martin, J.-L., and Konstantinov, A. A. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 1554-1559]. Analysis of the data obtained under isotropic and anisotropic polarization conditions and additional flash photolysis nanosecond experiments on a mutant of cytochrome bd mostly lacking heme b(595) allow to attribute the features in the well-known but unusual CO dissociation spectrum of cytochrome bd to individual heme d and heme b(595) transitions. This renders it possible to compare the spectra of CO dissociation from reduced and mixed-valence cytochrome bd under static conditions and on a picosecond time scale in much more detail than previously possible. CO binding/dissociation from heme d is shown to perturb ferrous heme b(595), causing induction/loss of an absorption band centered at 435 nm. In addition, the CO photodissociation-induced absorption changes at 50 ps reveal a bathochromic shift of ferrous heme b(595) relative to the static spectrum. No evidence for transient binding of CO to heme b(595) after dissociation from heme d is found in the picosecond time range. The yield of CO photodissociation from heme d on a time scale of < 15 ps is found to be diminished more than 3-fold when heme b(595) is oxidized rather than reduced. In contrast to other known heme proteins, molecular oxygen cannot be photodissociated from the mixed-valence cytochrome bd at all, indicating a unique structural and electronic configuration of the diheme active site in the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
In the spectral region 350-800 nm at 4.2 K we measured magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the pentacoordinated complex of protcheme with 2-methylimidazole, deoxyleghemoglobin, neutral and alkaline forms of reduced horseradish peroxidase in the equilibrium states, as well as in non-equilibrium states produced by low-temperature photolysis of their carbon monoxide derivatives. Earlier the corresponding results have been obtained for myoglobin, hemoglobin and cytochromes P-450 and P-420. The energies of Fe-N (proximal His) and Fe-N(pyrroles) bonds and their changes upon ligand binding in heme proteins and enzymes were compared with those in the model heme complex thus providing conformational contribution into stereochemistry of the active site. The examples of weak and strong conformational "pressure" on stereochemistry were analysed and observed. If conformational energy contribution into stereochemistry prevails the electronic one the heme stereochemistry remains unchanged on ligand binding as it was observed for leghemoglobin and alkaline horseradish peroxidase. The change of bond energies in myoglobin and hemoglobin on ligand binding are comparable with those in protein free pentacoordinated protoheme, giving an example of weak conformational contribution to heme stereochemistry. The role of protein conformation energy in the modulation of ligand binding properties of heme in leghemoglobin relative to those in myoglobins is discussed. The most striking result were obtained in the study of reduced horseradish peroxidase in the pH region of 6.0-10.2. It was found that such different perturbations as ligand binding and heme-linked ionization of the distal amino acid residue induce identical changes in heme stereochemistry. Neither heme-linked ionization in the carbon monoxide complex nor the geometry of Fe-Co bond affect the heme local structure of photoproducts. These and other findings suggest a very low conformation mobility of horseradish peroxidase whose protein constraints appear to allow only two preferable geometries of specific amino acid residues that form the heme pocket. The role of the two tertiary structure constraints on the heme in the mechanism of horseradish peroxidase function is discussed. It is supposed that one conformation produces a heme environment suitable for two-electron oxidation of the native enzyme to compound I by hydrogen peroxide while another conformation changes the heme stereochemistry in the direction favourable for back reduction of compound I by the substrate to the resting enzyme through two one-electron steps. The switch from one tertiary structure to another is expected to be induced by substrate bind  相似文献   

16.
17.
The homodimeric hemoglobin (HbN) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis displays an extremely high oxygen binding affinity and cooperativity. Sequence alignment with other hemoglobins suggests that the proximal F8 ligand is histidine, the distal E7 residue is leucine, and the B10 position is occupied by tyrosine. To determine how these heme pocket residues regulate the ligand binding affinities and physiological functions of HbN, we have measured the resonance Raman spectra of the O(2), CO, and OH(-) derivatives of the wild type protein and the B10 Tyr --> Leu and Phe mutants. Taken together these data demonstrate a unique distal environment in which the heme bound ligands strongly interact with the B10 tyrosine residue. The implications of these data on the physiological functions of HbN and another heme-containing protein, cytochrome c oxidase, are considered.  相似文献   

18.
The heme moieties of cytochromes P-450 and P1-450 (P-448) have been characterized. CO-binding particles, devoid of cytochrome b5, were prepared from normal or 3-methylcholanthrene-treated animals. Heme was removed by acid-acetone treatment of the CO-binding particles and crystallized. Heme isolated from hemoglobin of the corresponding animals served as a control. Reductive degradation (hydriodic acid) followed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis indicated the presence of opso-, crypto-, hemo-, and phyllopyrrole. Visible spectra of the iron-free tetrapyrroles isolated from microsomal heme and hemoglobin were identical and showed typical aetioporphyrin spectra. Finally, the mass spectra of the tetrapyrrole dimethyl esters isolated from microsomal heme and hemoglobin were identical to authentic protoporphyrin IX dimethyl ester. These data strongly suggest that the heme of cytochrome P-450 and P1-450 are identical and are the same the same as that of hemoglobin, namely protoporphyrin IX.  相似文献   

19.
The reason for the presence of hemoglobin-like molecules in insects, such as Drosophila melanogaster, that live in fully aerobic environments has yet to be determined. Heme endogenous hexacoordination (where HisE7 and HisF8 axial ligands to the heme Fe atom are both provided by the protein) is a recently discovered mechanism proposed to modulate O(2) affinity in hemoglobins from different species. Previous results have shown that D. melanogaster hemoglobin 1 (product of the glob1 gene) displays heme endogenous hexacoordination in both the ferrous and ferric states. Here we present kinetic data characterizing the exogenous cyanide ligand binding process, and the three-dimensional structure (at 1.4 A resolution) of the ensuing cyano-met D. melanogaster hemoglobin. Comparison with the crystal structure of the endogenously hexacoordinated D. melanogaster hemoglobin shows that the transition to the cyano-met form is supported by conformational readjustment in the CD-D-E region of the protein, which removes HisE7 from the heme. The structural and functional features of D. melanogaster hemoglobin are examined in light of previous results achieved for human and mouse neuroglobins and for human cytoglobin, which display heme endogenous hexacoordination. The study shows that, despite the rather constant value for cyanide association rate constants for the ferric hemoproteins, different distal site conformational readjustments and/or heme sliding mechanisms are displayed by the known hexacoordinate hemoglobins as a result of exogenous ligand binding.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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