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1.
1. Cyanide hemochromogen probably contains one cyanide group per heme group. 2. The equilibrium between pyridine hemochromogen and its components, pyridine and reduced heme, is complicated to an unknown extent by the precipitation of reduced heme and the aggregation of pyridine hemochromogen. 3. These complications were not taken into account in R. Hill''s experiments on pyridine hemochromogen. 4. Even if Hill''s experiments are sound they do not prove his conclusion that pyridine hemochromogen contains two pyridine groups per heme group.  相似文献   

2.
Most antimalarial therapeutics, including chloroquine and artemisinin, induce free heme-mediated toxicity in Plasmodium. This cytotoxic heme is produced as a by-product during the large-scale digestion of host hemoglobin. Conversion of this host-derived heme into inert crystalline hemozoin is the only defense mechanism in Plasmodium against heme-induced cytotoxicity. Heme detoxification protein (HDP), a highly conserved plasmodial protein, is reported to be the most efficient biological mediator for heme to hemozoin transformation. Despite its significance, HDP has never been extensively studied for heme transformation into hemozoin. Therefore, we wish to develop a method to study the HDP-mediated transformation of heme into hemozoin. We have adopted, modified, and optimized the pyridine hemochrome assay to study HDP catalysis and use substrate and time kinetics to study the HDP-mediated transformation of heme into hemozoin. In contrast to the previously reported assay for HDP, we found that the new assay is more precise, accurate, and handy, making it more suitable for kinetic studies. HDP-mediated transformation of heme into hemozoin is not a single-step process, and involves a transient intermediate, most likely a cyclic heme dimer. The kinetics and the manner of HDP-mediated hemozoin production are dependent on the substrate concentration, and a small fraction of substrate remains untransformed to hemozoin irrespective of reaction time. Combining HDP as a catalyst and the pyridine hemochrome assay will facilitate the efficient screening of future antimalarials.  相似文献   

3.
Complex III was purified from submitochondrial particles prepared from Euglena gracilis. The purified complex consisted of 10 subunits and lost antimycin sensitivity. The Euglena complex III showed an atypical difference absorption spectrum for cytochrome c1 with its alpha-band maximum at 561 nm. The pyridine ferrohemochrome prepared from covalently bound heme in the Euglena complex III had an alpha-peak at 553 nm. This wavelength is the same as that of pyridine ferrohemochrome prepared from Euglena mitochondrial cytochrome c (c-558), the heme of which is linked to only a single cysteine residue through a thioether bond. Cytochrome c1 which was a heme-stained subunit with a molecular mass of 32.5 kDa was isolated from the purified complex III and its N-terminal sequence of 46 amino acids was determined. On the basis of apparent homologies to cytochromes c1 from other sources, this sequence included the heme-binding region. However, the amino acid at position 36, corresponding to the first cysteine involved in heme linkage in other cytochromes c1, was phenylalanine. Position 39, corresponding to the second cysteine, was not identified despite the treatment for removal of the heme and carboxymethylation of the expected cysteine. The unidentified amino acid is assumed to be a derivative of cysteine to which the heme is linked through a single thioether bond. The histidine-40 corresponding to the probable fifth ligand for heme iron was conserved in Euglena cytochrome c1.  相似文献   

4.
We report a novel affinity‐based purification method for proteins expressed in Escherichia coli that uses the coordination of a heme tag to an L ‐histidine‐immobilized sepharose (HIS) resin. This approach provides an affinity purification tag visible to the eye, facilitating tracking of the protein. We show that azurin and maltose binding protein are readily purified from cell lysate using the heme tag and HIS resin. Mild conditions are used; heme‐tagged proteins are bound to the HIS resin in phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, and eluted by adding 200–500 mM imidazole or binding buffer at pH 5 or 8. The HIS resin exhibits a low level of nonspecific binding of untagged cellular proteins for the systems studied here. An additional advantage of the heme tag‐HIS method for purification is that the heme tag can be used for protein quantification by using the pyridine hemochrome absorbance method for heme concentration determination.  相似文献   

5.
The prosthetic group of milk lactoperoxidase has been isolated from a Pronase hydrolysate of the enzyme and identified spectroscopically and chromatographically as protoheme IX. Partial degradation of the heme occurred during the proteolysis, possibly as a result of coupled oxidation in the presence of glycine and oxygen. The heme is assumed to be buried in the protein molecule in a crevice, which allows ligands to bind to the iron on one side only. The pyridine hemochrome of lactoperoxidase with alpha-band at 563 nm is interpreted as a mixed ligand complex with pyridine on one side of the heme and a ligand originating from the protein on the other. No experimental evidence supports the view that the heme is covalently bound to the protein through an ester linkage.  相似文献   

6.
We report an HPLC method for separating the four regioisomers of verdoheme formed in the coupled oxidation of hemin with oxygen and ascorbate in aqueous pyridine. The reversed-phase ion-pair system uses hexafluoroacetone and pyridine as ion-pair agents. The regiochemistry of the separated isomers was established both by HPLC of the corresponding biliverdin IX derivatives and by 1H NMR of each isomer. Optical spectra of the pyridine verdohemochrome isomers were similar to each other, but showed differences in the absorption maxima in the red region, which appear at 680, 663, 648 and 660 nm for the alpha, beta, gamma, and delta-isomers, respectively. Each of the four isomers was incorporated anaerobically into heme oxygenase-1, yielding the corresponding verdoheme-enzyme complex. The ferrous forms had absorption maxima at 690, 667, 655, and 663 nm, and their CO-bound forms had maxima at 638, 624, 616, and 626 nm for alpha, beta, gamma, and delta-isomer, respectively. Addition of ferricyanide to the alpha-verdoheme-heme oxygenase complex brought about a ferric low-spin heme-like signal, which is identical with the ferric alpha-verdoheme complexed with the heme oxygenase that was observed in the heme oxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

7.
Heme proteins can perform a variety of electrochemical functions. While natural heme proteins carry out particular functions selected by biological evolution, artificial heme proteins, in principle, can be tailored to suit specified technological applications. Here we describe initial characterization of the electrochemical properties of a de novo heme protein, S824C. Protein S824C is a four-helix bundle derived from a library of sequences that was designed by binary patterning of polar and nonpolar amino acids. Protein S824C was immobilized on a gold electrode and the formal potential of heme-protein complex was studied as a function of pH and ionic strength. The binding of exogenous N-donor ligands to heme/S824C was monitored by measuring shifts in the potential that occurred upon addition of various concentrations of imidazole or pyridine derivatives. The response of heme/S824C to these ligands was then compared to the response of isolated heme (without protein) to the same ligands. The observed shifts in potential depended on both the concentration and the structure of the added ligand. Small changes in structure of the ligand (e.g. pyridine versus 2-amino pyridine) produced significant shifts in the potential of the heme-protein. The observed shifts correlate to the differential binding of the N-donor molecules to the oxidized and reduced states of the heme. Further, it was observed that the electrochemical response of the buried heme in heme/S824C differed significantly from that of isolated heme. These studies demonstrate that the structure of the de novo protein modulates the binding of N-donor ligands to heme.  相似文献   

8.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical spectra are used as probes of the heme and its ligands in ferric and ferrous leghemoglobin. The proximal ligand to the heme iron atom of ferric soybean leghemoglobin is identified as imidazole by comparison of the EPR of leghemoglobin hydroxide, azide, and cyanide with the corresponding derivatives of human hemoglobin. Optical spectra show that ferric soybean leghemoglobin near room temperature is almost entirely in the high spin state. At 77 K the optical spectrum is that of a low spin compound, while at 1.6 K the EPR is that of a low spin form resembling bis-imidazole heme. Acetate binds to ferric leghemoglobin to form a high spin complex as judged from the optical spectrum. The EPR of this complex is that of high spin ferric heme in a nearly axial environment. The complexes of ferrous leghemoglobin with substituted pyridines exhibit optical absorption maxima near 685 nm, whose absorption maxima and extinctions are strongly dependent on the nature of the substitutents of the pyridine ring; electron withdrawing groups on the pyridine ring shift the absorption maxima to lower energy. A crystal field analysis of the EPR of nicotinate derivatives of ferric leghemoblobin demonstrates that the pyridine nitrogen is also bound to the heme iron in the ferric state. These findings lead us to picture leghemoglobin as a somewhat flexible molecule in which the transition region between the E and F helices may act as a hinge, opening a small amount at higher temperature to a stable configuration in which the protein is high spin and can accommodate exogenous ligand molecules and closing at low temperature to a second stable configuration in which the protein is low spin and in which close approach of the E helix permits the distal histidine to become the principal sixth ligand.  相似文献   

9.
The electron-nuclear coupling in low-spin iron complexes including myoglobin hydroxide (MbOH) and two related model compounds, Fe(III) tetraphenylporphyrin(pyridine)(OR-) (R = H or CH3) and Fe(III) tetraphenylporphyrin(butylamine)(OR-) was investigated using electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectroscopy. The assignment of frequency components in ESEEM spectra was accomplished through the use of nitrogen isotopic substitution wherever necessary. For example, the proximal imidazole coupling in MbOH was investigated without interference from the contributions of porphyrin 14N nuclei after substitution of the heme in native Mb with 15N-labeled heme. Computer simulation of spectra using angle selected techniques enabled the assignment of parameters describing the hyperfine and quadrupole interactions for axially bound nitrogen of imidazole in MbOH, of axial pyridine and butylamine in the models, and for the porphyrin nitrogens of the heme in native MbOH. The isotropic component of axial nitrogen hyperfine interactions exhibits a trend from 5 to 4 MHz, with imidazole (MbOH) greater than pyridine greater than amine. The nuclear quadrupole interaction coupling constant e2Qq was near 2 MHz for all nitrogens in these complexes. The Qzz axis of the nuclear quadrupole interaction tensor for the proximal imidazole nitrogen in MbOH was found to be aligned near gz (gmax) in MbOH, suggesting that gz is near the heme normal. A crystal field analysis, that allows a calculation of rhombic and axial splittings for the d orbitals of the t2g set in a low-spin heme complex, based on the g tensor assignment gz greater than gy greater than gx, yielded results that are consistent with the poor pi-acceptor properties expected for the closed shell oxygen atom of the hydroxide ligand in MbOH. A discussion is presented of the unusual results reported in a linear electric field effect in EPR (LEFE) study of MbOH published previously [Mims, W. B., & Peisach, J. (1976) J. Chem. Phys. 64, 1074-1091].  相似文献   

10.
The chlorite dismutases (C-family proteins) are a widespread family of heme-binding proteins for which chemical and biological roles remain unclear. An association of the gene with heme biosynthesis in Gram-positive bacteria was previously demonstrated by experiments involving introduction of genes from two Gram-positive species into heme biosynthesis mutant strains of Escherichia coli, leading to the gene being renamed hemQ. To assess the gene product''s biological role more directly, a Staphylococcus aureus strain with an inactivated hemQ gene was generated and shown to be a slow growing small colony variant under aerobic but not anaerobic conditions. The small colony variant phenotype is rescued by the addition of exogenous heme despite an otherwise wild type heme biosynthetic pathway. The ΔhemQ mutant accumulates coproporphyrin specifically under aerobic conditions. Although its sequence is highly similar to functional chlorite dismutases, the HemQ protein has no steady state reactivity with chlorite, very modest reactivity with H2O2 or peracetic acid, and no observable transient intermediates. HemQ''s equilibrium affinity for heme is in the low micromolar range. Holo-HemQ reconstituted with heme exhibits heme lysis after <50 turnovers with peroxide and <10 turnovers with chlorite. The heme-free apoprotein aggregates or unfolds over time. IsdG-like proteins and antibiotic biosynthesis monooxygenases are close sequence and structural relatives of HemQ that use heme or porphyrin-like organic molecules as substrates. The genetic and biochemical data suggest a similar substrate role for heme or porphyrin, with possible sensor-regulator functions for the protein. HemQ heme could serve as the means by which S. aureus reversibly adopts an SCV phenotype in response to redox stress.  相似文献   

11.
We have recently reported that expression of an unidentified heme protein is enhanced in a nitrifying activated sludge community under low (0.1 mg O2/L) dissolved oxygen (DO) conditions. A preliminary assessment suggested it may be a type of hemoglobin (Hb) or a lesser-known component of the energy-transducing pathways of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) (particularly an oxidase or peroxidase). Here, additional work was done to characterize this protein. Due to the unfeasibility of identifying the protein using gene-based methods, our approach was to carry out assays that target the activity and function of the protein, its location in the cell, and determination of the organisms that express it. Using CO-difference spectra, it was shown that the protein is expressed by AOB preferentially in the cytoplasm, while the pyridine hemochromogen method demonstrated that it has heme c as its prosthetic group. Peroxidase and oxidase assays were carried out on the soluble fraction of the low DO-grown cells; neither the peroxidase nor oxidase activities matched those of the CO-binding heme protein detected. Even though it is not possible to conclusively identify the protein detected as a Hb, all other known possibilities have been ruled out. Further work is needed to verify the identity of the heme protein as a Hb and to determine its type and biochemical role under low oxygen conditions.  相似文献   

12.
Wang WH  Lu JX  Yao P  Xie Y  Huang ZX 《Protein engineering》2003,16(12):1047-1054
A gene mutant library containing 16 designed mutated genes at His39 of cytochrome b(5) has been constructed by using gene random mutagenesis. Two variants of cytochrome b(5), His39Ser and His39Cys mutant proteins, have been obtained. Protein characterizations and reactions were performed showing that these two mutants have distinct heme coordination environments: ferric His39Ser mutant is a high-spin species whose heme is coordinated by proximal His63 and likely a water molecule in the distal pocket, while ferrous His39Ser mutant has a low-spin heme coordinated by His63 and Ser39; on the other hand, the ferric His39Cys mutant is a low-spin species with His63 and Cys39 acting as two axial ligands of the heme, the ferrous His39Cys mutant is at high-spin state with the only heme ligand of His63. These two mutants were also found to have quite lower heme-binding stabilities. The order of stabilities of ferric proteins is: wild-type cytochrome b(5) > His39Cys > His39Ser.  相似文献   

13.
Staphylococcus aureus is a common hospital- and community-acquired bacterium that can cause devastating infections and is often multidrug-resistant. Iron acquisition is required by S. aureus during an infection, and iron acquisition pathways are potential targets for therapies. The gene NWMN2274 in S. aureus strain Newman is annotated as an oxidoreductase of the diverse pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase (PNDO) family. We show that NWMN2274 is an electron donor to IsdG and IsdI catalyzing the degradation of heme, and we have renamed this protein IruO. Recombinant IruO is a FAD-containing NADPH-dependent reductase. In the presence of NADPH and IruO, either IsdI or IsdG degraded bound heme 10-fold more rapidly than with the chemical reductant ascorbic acid. Varying IsdI-heme substrate and monitoring loss of the heme Soret band gave a Km of 15 ± 4 μm, a kcat of 5.2 ± 0.7 min−1, and a kcat/Km of 5.8 × 103 m−1 s−1. From HPLC and electronic spectra, the major heme degradation products are 5-oxo-δ-bilirubin and 15-oxo-β-bilirubin (staphylobilins), as observed with ascorbic acid. Although heme degradation by IsdI or IsdG can occur in the presence of H2O2, the addition of catalase and superoxide dismutase did not disrupt NADPH/IruO heme degradation reactions. The degree of electron coupling between IruO and IsdI or IsdG remains to be determined. Homologs of IruO were identified by sequence similarity in the genomes of Gram-positive bacteria that possess IsdG-family heme oxygenases. A phylogeny of these homologs identifies a distinct clade of pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductases likely involved in iron uptake systems. IruO is the likely in vivo reductant required for heme degradation by S. aureus.  相似文献   

14.
Solubilization and partial purification of heme oxygenase from rat liver.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Hepatic microsomal heme oxygenase was solubilized, partially purified, and characterized from Co2+-treated rats. The enzyme on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis exhibited a minimum molecular weight of greater than or equal to 68,000. The solubilized enzyme was totally devoid of contamination with cytochrome P-450 or b5. The requirement for reduced pyridine nucleotides was absolute, and ascorbate could not support heme oxidative activity. However, both TPNH and DPNH could serve as electron donors, with TPNH being more effective. The presence of an appropriate flavoprotein reductase was essential for heme oxidation. The enzyme had an apparent Km of 40 micrometer, a pH optimum of 7.5, and lost substantial activity upon freezing and thawing. Methemoglobin was 30% as effective a substrate for the enzyme as was heme. Free porphyrins could not serve as substrates for the enzyme. The activity of the enzyme was inhibited by HgCl2, p-chloromercuribenzoate, iodoacetamide, mercaptoethanol, and dithiothrietol indicating that free -SH group(s) is necessary for enzyme activity.  相似文献   

15.
Heme d has been isolated from the terminal oxidase complex of Escherichia coli strain MR43L/F152 and purified by high-pressure liquid chromatography. The infrared spectrum indicated that carbonyls in the chlorin skeleton of this isolated heme existed as carboxylic acids. Earlier work on the iron-free chlorin had demonstrated the presence of a spirolactone substituent. This may have arisen from a cyclization reaction from a dicarboxylic acid, diol precursor. Although the free heme in extracts can exist as a diol, this does not prove that the diol as such is the precise form in the enzyme complex. Visible and fluorescence spectra are reported for a variety of derivatives and complexes of heme d to establish a spectral library that may be used to prove the presence of this structure in other enzymes or cells. Association constants have been measured for complexes of heme d with cyanide, imidazole, and pyridine and are contrasted to available data for protoheme.  相似文献   

16.
Extracts of the phycocyanin-containing unicellular red alga, Cyanidium caldarium, catalyzed enzymatic cleavage of the heme macrocycle to form the linear tetrapyrrole bilin structure. This is the key first step in the branch of the tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathway leading to phycobilin photosynthetic accessory pigments. A mixed-function oxidase mechanism, similar to the biliverdin-forming reaction catalyzed by animal cell-derived microsomal heme oxygenase, was indicated by requirements for O2 and a reduced pyridine nucleotide. To avoid enzymatic conversion of the bilin product to phycocyanobilins and subsequent degradation during incubation, mesoheme IX was substituted for the normal physiological substrate, protoheme IX. Mesobiliverdin IX alpha was identified as the primary incubation product by comparative reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography and absorption spectrophotometry. The enzymatic nature of the reaction was indicated by the requirement for cell extract, absence of activity in boiled cell extract, high specificity for NADPH as cosubstrate, formation of the physiologically relevant IX alpha bilin isomer, and over 75% inhibition by 1 microM Sn-protoporphyrin, which has been reported to be a competitive inhibitor of animal microsomal heme oxygenase. On the other hand, coupled oxidation of mesoheme, catalyzed by ascorbate plus pyridine or myoglobin, yielded a mixture of ring-opening mesobiliverdin IX isomers, was not inhibited by Sn-protoporphyrin, and could not use NADPH as the reductant. Unlike the animal microsomal heme oxygenase, the algal reaction appeared to be catalyzed by a soluble enzyme that was not sedimentable by centrifugation for 1 h at 200,000g. Although NADPH was the preferred reductant, small amounts of activity were obtained with NADH or ascorbate. A portion of the activity was retained after gel filtration of the cell extract to remove low-molecular-weight components. Considerable stimulation of activity, particularly in preparations that had been subjected to gel filtration, was obtained by addition of ascorbate to the incubation mixture containing NADPH. The results indicate that C. caldarium possesses a true heme oxygenase system, with properties somewhat different from that catalyzing heme degradation in animals. Taken together with previous results indicating that biliverdin is a precursor to phycocyanobilin, the results suggest that algal heme oxygenase is a component of the phycobilin biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

17.
The biochemical paradigm for carbon monoxide (CO) is driven by the century-old Warburg hypothesis: CO alters O(2)-dependent functions by binding heme proteins in competitive relation to 1/oxygen partial pressure (PO(2)). High PO(2) thus hastens CO elimination and toxicity resolution, but with more O(2), CO-exposed tissues paradoxically experience less oxidative stress. To help resolve this paradox we tested the Warburg hypothesis using a highly sensitive gas-reduction method to track CO uptake and elimination in brain, heart, and skeletal muscle in situ during and after exogenous CO administration. We found that CO administration does increase tissue CO concentration, but not in strict relation to 1/PO(2). Tissue gas uptake and elimination lag behind blood CO as predicted, but 1/PO(2) vs. [CO] fails even at hyperbaric PO(2). Mechanistically, we established in the brain that cytosol heme concentration increases 10-fold after CO exposure, which sustains intracellular CO content by providing substrate for heme oxygenase (HO) activated after hypoxia when O(2) is resupplied to cells rich in reduced pyridine nucleotides. We further demonstrate by analysis of CO production rates that this heme stress is not due to HO inhibition and that heme accumulation is facilitated by low brain PO(2). The latter becomes rate limiting for HO activity even at physiological PO(2), and the heme stress leads to doubling of brain HO-1 protein. We thus reveal novel biochemical actions of both CO and O(2) that must be accounted for when evaluating oxidative stress and biological signaling by these gases.  相似文献   

18.
Effects of pH on the ligand-binding reactions of ferric heme in cytochrome P-450 from Pseudomonas putida (camphor 5-monooxygenase, EC 1.14.15.1) were studied by using cyanide, N-methylimidazole, pyridine, and ethylisocyanide as ligands. In all cases, affinity of the ferric heme for the ligand was found to increase as pH of the medium was raised from around 6 to 9. Depending on the ligand, the increase was 10- to 1000-fold and the shapes of their pH-affinity curves were remarkably different. Analyses such pH profiles disclosed the presence of a dissociable group in the enzyme with a pK value of approximately 9.5 and that its ionization greatly enhanced the affinity of the heme for ligands. When a dissociable ligand such as hydrogen cyanide and N-methylimidazole was used, the dissociated form of the ligand had a higher affinity toward the heme than the undissociated form. The shapes of the pH-affinity curves were successfully simulated as overlapping curves of ionization reactions of the ligand and the dissociable group. In addition, size of the ligand molecule was shown to be also important in the binding reaction: relatively large molecules such as pyridine, ethylisocyanide, and N-methylimidazole bound to the enzyme in a competitive manner against d-camphor concentration, whereas the binding of a smaller molecule such as cyanide was inhibited by the substrate in a noncompetitive manner. On the basis of these findings, control mechanisms for the ligand-binding reactions of the cytochrome P-450 from P. putida are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
J C Lagarias 《Biochemistry》1982,21(23):5962-5967
A new methodology is described for the chemical modification of the heme prosthetic group of horse heart cytochrome c. The selective modification of the heme moiety of cytochrome c is facilitated by utilizing coupling oxidation conditions. Comparison of the absorption spectra of this chemically modified cytochrome c species in two different solvents (aqueous pyridine and carbon monoxide saturated 6 M guanidinium chloride) with those of two model compounds [bis(pyridine)(2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octaethyl-5-oxaporphyrinato)iron(II) tetrafluoroborate salt and (pyridine)carbonyl-(2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octaethyl-5-oxaporphyrinato)iron(II) tetrafluoroborate salt] shows that coupled oxidation of cytochrome c affords a new protein with a covalently bound iron(II) oxaporphyrin prosthetic group. Amino acid analysis of this protein-bound iron(II) oxaporphyrin species reveals that only limited modification of the primary structure of the apoprotein occurs during coupled oxidation of cytochrome c. This protein-bound iron(II) oxaporphyrin species is also interconvertible to a protein-bound bilatriene species under hydrolytic conditions. The synthetic utility of the coupled oxidation of cytochrome c for the preparation of chromoproteins which possess covalently bound iron(II) oxaporphyrin and bilatriene prosthetic groups is considered.  相似文献   

20.
The 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (nmr) spectra of complexes of soybean ferric leghemoglobin with 3-substituted pyridines and 5-substituted nicotinic acids have been recorded in order to determine the influence of axial ligands on heme electronic structure. The hyperfine shifted resonances of the heme group were assigned by analogy to previous assignments for the pyridine and nicotinic acid complexes of leghemoglobin. The spectra are characteristic of predominantly low-spin ferric heme complexes. For the pyridine complexes, the rate of ligand exchange was found to increase with decreasing ligand pKA. For many of the complexes, optical and nmr spectra reveal the presence of an equilibrium mixture of high- and low-spin states of the iron atom. The percentage of high-spin component increases with decreasing ligand pKA Smaller hyperfine shifts are noted for leghemoglobin complexes with ligands capable of weak ligand → metal π bonding. The pattern of hyperfine shifted resonances is similar for all complexes studied and indicates that the overall heme electronic structure is dominated by the bonding to the proximal histidine.  相似文献   

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