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1.
H Hori  M Ikeda-Saito 《Biochemistry》1990,29(30):7106-7112
During the course of a reducing reaction using ketyl radicals generated from ketone photoreduction with ultraviolet light, a photoinduced chemical modification of the chromophore group in myeloperoxidase has been found. Light absorption and resonance Raman spectra for this modified enzyme indicated an iron porphyrin chromophore group. The alkaline pyridine hemochrome of the modified enzyme exhibited an optical spectrum closely related to that of iron protoporphyrin IX. The chromophore group of the modified myeloperoxidase was cleaved from the protein by methoxide. Proton magnetic resonance of the diamagnetic bis(cyanide) compound of the extracted heme group showed the presence of two vinyl and three methyl side chains associated with a porphyrin macrocycle. These data provide further insight into the structure of the active site in myeloperoxidase. The EPR spectral properties and enzymatic activities of the native myeloperoxidase are essentially conserved in the modified enzyme. Our present results indicate that the heme peripheral substituent is modified while the stereochemical structure surrounding the chromophore group is not altered by the photochemical modification.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of the chaotropic agent, guanidine HCl, on the chlorinating activity, optical absorption, EPR, and resonance Raman spectra of myeloperoxidase have been studied. In the presence of the agent the Soret optical absorption of the reduced enzyme (lambda max = 474 nm) is blue shifted to 448 nm, a position similar to heme alpha-containing enzymes. The chlorinating activity of the enzyme disappears, and EPR spectra show a loss of intensity of the rhombic high spin heme signals (gx = 6.9; gy = 5.4) and the appearance of a more axial high spin signal (gx = gy = 6.0). Surprisingly the effects of guanidine HCl are partly reversible. Upon decreasing the concentration of the chaotropic agents by dilution, both the chlorinating activity and the original optical spectrum of native reduced enzyme (lambda max = 474 nm) are partly restored. The resonance Raman spectra of denatured cyanomyeloperoxidase are less complicated than those of native myeloperoxidase, which have been interpreted previously to suggest an iron chlorin chromophore. The multiple lines in the oxidation state marker region are not seen in the spectra of the denatured species. The changes suggest that upon denaturation the macrocycle is converted into a more symmetric structure. Since the effects on the optical absorption spectrum are reversible we speculate that, in the native enzyme, an apparent porphyrin macrocycle undergoes a reversible interaction with amino acid residues in the protein which creates an asymmetry in the electronic distribution of the macrocycle. Comparison of the Raman spectra of denatured cyanomyeloperoxidase with those of analogous heme alpha model complexes suggests the presence of a formyl group in the denatured species; our data, however, demonstrate that the chromophore structure is not identical to heme alpha and may contain a different C beta substitution on the ring macrocycle.  相似文献   

3.
Myeloperoxidase compound II has been characterized by using optical absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopies. Compared to compounds II in other peroxidases, the electronic and vibrational properties of this intermediate are strongly perturbed due to the unusual active-site iron chromophore that occurs in myeloperoxidase. Despite this difference in prosthetic group, however, other properties of myeloperoxidase compound II are similar to those observed for this intermediate in the more common peroxidases (horseradish peroxidase in particular). Two forms of the myeloperoxidase intermediate species, each with distinct absorption spectra, are recognized as a function of pH. We present evidence consistent with interconversion of these two forms via a heme-linked ionization of a distal amino acid residue with a pKa congruent to 9. From resonance Raman studies of isotopically labeled species at pH 10.7, we identify an iron-oxygen stretching frequency at 782 cm-1, indicating the presence of an oxoferryl (O = FeIV) group in myeloperoxidase compound II. We further conclude that the oxo ligand is not hydrogen bonded above the pKa but possibly exhibits oxygen exchange with the medium at pH values below the pKa due to hydrogen bonding of the oxo ligand to the distal protein group.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of ligands with various field strengths on the optical absorption spectrum of myeloperoxidase have been investigated. As is the case with other hemoproteins, the Soret peak in the optical absorption spectra at 77 K moves to longer wavelengths when strong-field ligands are present, whereas binding of such ligands as chloride and fluoride, which stabilize the high-spin state, shows the opposite effect. With a ligand of intermediate field strength, such as azide, the optical spectrum is not affected at room temperature, but lowering of the temperature results in the formation of the low-spin form of the enzyme. Similarly, in native myeloperoxidase a spin state equilibrium is found in which the low-spin state is favoured at high ionic strength and displays corresponding changes in the optical spectra. From the ligand- and the temperature-induced changes in the optical spectra of the ferric enzyme it is concluded that the band at 620-630 nm is an alpha band of the low-spin heme iron species, whereas the bands at 500 and 690 nm are probably 'charge-transfer' bands of the heme with the iron in the high-spin state.  相似文献   

5.
The resonance Raman spectra of ferric derivatives of myeloperoxidase at pH 8 show ligand-dependent differences. The data are consistent with the resting enzyme and the chloride and fluoride derivatives all having 6-coordinated high-spin configurations. At pH 4 we find that the resting enzyme is susceptible to photodegradation from our low power incident laser beam. Chloride binding inhibits this denaturation. Our data support direct binding of chloride to the enzyme under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG) binds both hemes and metal ions simultaneously with evidence for interaction between the two. This study uses resonance Raman and optical absorption spectroscopies to examine the heme environment of the 1:1 iron-mesoporphyrin.HRG complex in its oxidized, reduced and CO-bound forms in the absence and presence of copper. Significant perturbation of Fe(3+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG is induced by Cu2+ binding to the protein. Specifically, high frequency heme resonance Raman bands indicative of low-spin, six-coordinate iron before Cu2+ binding exhibit monotonic intensity shifts to bands representing high-spin, five-coordinate iron. The latter coordination is in contrast to that found in hemoglobin and myoglobin, and explains the Cu(2+)-induced decrease and broadening of the Fe(3+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG Soret band concomitant with the increase in the high-spin marker band at 620 nm. After dithionite reduction, the Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG complex displays high frequency resonance Raman bands characteristic of low-spin heme and no iron-histidine stretch, which together suggest six-coordinate iron. Furthermore, the local heme environment of the complex is not altered by the binding of Cu1+. CO-bound Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG exhibits bands in the high and low frequency regions similar to those of other CO-bound heme proteins except that the iron-CO stretch at 505 cm-1 is unusually broad with delta nu approximately 30 cm-1. The dynamics of CO photolysis and rebinding to Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG are also distinctive. The net quantum yield for photolysis at 10 ns is low relative to most heme proteins, which may be attributed to very rapid geminate recombination. A similar low net quantum yield and broad iron-CO stretch have so far only been observed in a dimeric cytochrome c' from Chromatium vinosum. Furthermore, the photolytic transient of Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG lacks bands corresponding to high-spin, five-coordinate iron as is found in hemoglobin and myoglobin under similar experimental conditions, suggesting iron hexacoordination before CO recombination. These data are consistent with a closely packed distal heme pocket that hinders ligand diffusion into the surrounding solvent.  相似文献   

7.
1. EPR spectra of human granulocytes (4 - 10(8) cells per ml) show an intense high-spin ferric heme signal with rhombic symmetry (gx = 6.90 and gy = 5.07) for the heme group. These g-values are identical to those of partially purified myeloperoxidase and thus the signal is derived from ferric myeloperoxidase. In chicken granulocytes, which contain little or no myeloperoxidase, only an axial type of heme iron signal, weak in intensity, can be detected at g = 6.0. 2. Upon phagocytosis of latex particles by human granulocytes the high-spin heme signal with rhombic symmetry is slowly converted into a signal with axial symmetry (gx = gy = 6.0), showing that the EPR signals of myeloperoxidase in the intact cell can be used to study the involvement of the enzyme in metabolic changes during phagocytosis.  相似文献   

8.
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase is an iron-tyrosinate protein   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A resonance Raman investigation into the blue chromophore of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase, a non-heme iron enzyme from Pseudomonas P. J. 874, reveals the presence of enhanced vibrations characteristic of tyrosinate coordination to the iron center. The excitation profiles for these features show that they are associated with the 595 nm absorption feature. EPR studies of this enzyme indicate the presence of a high-spin ferric center in a rhombic environment, as evidenced by a signal at g = 4.3 with the correct intensity for the measured iron content. This enzyme thus belongs to the emerging class of iron-tyrosinate proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The green heme protein sulfmyoglobin (SMb) has been suggested to contain a sulfur-modified iron chlorin prosthetic group. To evaluate this hypothesis, we have obtained high-frequency (greater than 1000 cm-1) resonance Raman spectra of both oxidized and reduced SMb with 457.9-, 488.0-, 514.5-, 568.2-, and 647.1-nm excitation. The SMb spectra are compared to those of native met- and deoxymyoglobin (Mb). Vibrational frequencies for SMb are generally similar to those of Mb, suggesting a high-spin state for both the Fe(III) and Fe(II) SMb species, as is typical of native Mb. However, major differences between SMb and Mb occur both for patterns of relative spectral intensities and for depolarization ratios. In particular, all B1g-depolarized porphyrin modes in the Mb spectra have become polarized, totally symmetric vibrational modes in the SMb spectra. These contrasts reflect a dramatic lowering of the effective symmetry for the SMb prosthetic group. Several new bands are observed in SMb spectra that are not present in spectra of either native Mb or iron protoporphyrin IX complexes. The observation of additional polarized bands flanking the oxidation state marker, V4, is of particular interest. In a parallel study, we compared the resonance Raman spectral properties of iron protoporphyrin IX-derived chlorins and metallo-octaethylchlorins with those of the analogous porphyrins: the chlorin spectra exhibited altered intensity patterns, an increased number of totally symmetric (polarized) vibrational bands, and several new vibrational bands, including one or two in the region of the oxidation state marker, V4. Thus, the resonance Raman spectral characteristics of SMb and metallo-chlorins are complementary and strongly support a chlorin prosthetic group for SMb. Furthermore, they establish testable criteria for investigating the prosthetic group structures of other green heme proteins by resonance Raman spectroscopy.  相似文献   

10.
With (resonance) Raman microscospectroscopy, it is possible to investigate the chemical constitution of a very small volume (0.5 fl) in a living cell. We have measured resonance Raman spectra in the cytoplasm of living normal, myeloperoxidase (MPO)-deficient, and cytochrome b558-deficient neutrophils and in isolated specific and azurophilic granule fractions, using an excitation wavelength of 413.1 nm. Similar experiments were performed after reduction of the redox centers by the addition of sodium dithionite. The specific and azurophilic granules in both redox states appeared to have clearly distinguishable Raman spectra when exciting at a wavelength of 413.1 nm. The azurophilic granules and the cytochrome b558-deficient neutrophils showed Raman spectra similar to that of the isolated MPO. The spectra of the specific granules and the MPO-deficient neutrophils corresponded very well to published cytochrome b558 spectra. The resonance Raman spectrum of the cytoplasmic region of normal neutrophilic granulocytes could be fitted with a combination of the spectra of the specific and azurophilic granules, which shows that the Raman signal of neutrophilic granulocytes mainly originates from MPO and cytochrome b558, at an excitation wavelength of 413.1 nm.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
To better understand the diverse mechanisms of spectral tuning operational in fluorescent proteins (FPs), we determined the 2.1-Å X-ray structure of dsFP483 from the reef-building coral Discosoma. This protein is a member of the cyan class of Anthozoa FPs and exhibits broad, double-humped excitation and absorbance bands, with a maximum at 437-440 nm and a shoulder at 453 nm. Although these features support a heterogeneous ground state for the protein-intrinsic chromophore, peak fluorescence occurs at 483 nm for all excitation wavelengths, suggesting a common emissive state. Optical properties are insensitive to changes in pH over the entire range of protein stability. The refined crystal structure of the biological tetramer (space group C2) demonstrates that all protomers bear a cis-coplanar chromophore chemically identical with that in green fluorescent protein (GFP). To test the roles of specific residues in color modulation, we investigated the optical properties of the H163Q and K70M variants. Although absorbance bands remain broad, peak excitation maxima are red shifted to 455 and 460 nm, emitting cyan light and green light, respectively. To probe chromophore ground-state features, we collected Raman spectra using 752-nm excitation. Surprisingly, the positions of key Raman bands of wild-type dsFP483 are most similar to those of the neutral GFP chromophore, whereas the K70M spectra are more closely aligned with the anionic form. The Raman data provide further evidence of a mixed ground state with chromophore populations that are modulated by mutation. Possible internal protonation equilibria, structural heterogeneity in the binding sites, and excited-state proton transfer mechanisms are discussed. Structural alignments of dsFP483 with the homologs DsRed, amFP486, and zFP538-K66M suggest that natural selection for cyan is an exquisitely fine-tuned and highly cooperative process involving a network of electrostatic interactions that may vary substantially in composition and arrangement.  相似文献   

13.
The absorption spectra of alkaline pyridine hemochrome of myeloperoxidase in its native, acid, and modified forms were similar to those of heme a, and the molar extinction coefficient of myeloperoxidase heme was very similar to that of heme a, assuming that myeloperoxidase contains only one heme. The anaerobic titration of myeloperoxidase with dithionite showed that one electron was consumed per molecule of the enzyme for its conversion to its reduced form. The EPR spectrum of myeloperoxidase indicated that the enzyme contains both high-spin heme and non-heme iron. Carbonyl reagents, such as borohydride, hydrazine, and benzhydrazide, reacted with myeloperoxidase, causing blue shifts in its absorption spectrum. The heme was labeled with a tritium of boro[3H]hydride, suggesting that the reagents reacted with a formyl group on the porphyrin ring of the myeloperoxidase heme. When hydrazine was added to cyanide complex I of myeloperoxidase the complex was converted to the hydrazine-enzyme compound. Myeloperoxidase reacted with bisulfite to form a compound with an absorption spectrum similar to that of cyanide complex I. Borohydride-treated myeloperoxidase formed only one cyanide complex, while the native enzyme formed two different cyanide complexes, I (Kd = 0.3 muM) and II (approximate Kd = 0.1 mM). The EPR spectrum indicated that cyanide complex I of myeloperoxidase still contained high-spin heme. The results suggested that cyanide complex I and the bisulfite compound of myeloperoxidase were adducts between the nucleophilic reagents and the formyl group of myeloperoxidase heme. Based on these results, we concluded that one of the two iron atoms in a myeloperoxidase molecule exists in a formyl-heme moiety similar to heme a and the other exists as a non-heme iron.  相似文献   

14.
1. The reaction of myeloperoxidase with fluoride, chloride and azide has been studied by EPR. 2. Fluoride decreases the rhombicity of the high-spin heme signal of myeloperoxidase and the nuclear spin of the fluoride atom induces a splitting in g parallel of 35 G. This observation demonstrates that fluoride binds as an axial ligand to the heme iron of the enzyme. 3. Addition of chloride to the fluoride-treated enzyme increases the rhombicity of the high-spin heme signal and brings about a disappearance of the splitting at g parallel. The addition of azide to the fluoride-treated enzyme changes the spin state of the heme iron from a high-to a low-spin state (gx = 2.68, gy = 2.22 and gz = 1.80). 4. Upon addition of chloride or fluoride to low-spin azido-myeloperoxidase this compound is converted into the high-spin chlorido- or fluorido-myeloperoxidase. These observations demonstrate that these ligands compete for a binding site at or close to the heme iron of myeloperoxidase.  相似文献   

15.
Resonance Raman spectra are reported for single crystals of cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) mutants, taken by using a microscope equipped with a variable-temperature stage. The spectra are similar to those observed for the mutant proteins in solution, but there are detectable differences having to do with the coordination and spin state of the heme. The Asn-235 mutant contains a mixture of six-coordinate high- and low-spin states with a detectably higher fraction of the former than in solution. Upon cooling even to 223 K, the heme is converted mostly to the low-spin form. The Phe-191 mutant likewise shows a high/low-spin six-coordinate mixture, together with a preponderant population of five-coordinate heme. Upon cooling, the high-spin six-coordinate population converts immediately to the low-spin form, while the five-coordinate population does so more slowly. This behavior is intermediate between that of native CCP and the Asn-235 mutant, consistent with an ancillary role for the normal Trp-191-Asp-235 H-bond in the proximal anchoring of the heme Fe. The Phe-51 mutant shows a dominant high-spin five-coordinate heme population in the single crystal, whereas in solution the six-coordinate form is dominant. This difference is mimicked by adding 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD) to the solution and is attributed to the dehydrating effect of MPD, which is present during crystallization. Upon lowering the temperature, the five-coordinate heme converts partially to a six-coordinate high-spin form.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The ferric form of the homodimeric hemoglobin from Scapharca inaequivalvis (HbI) displays a unique pH-dependent behavior involving the interconversion among a monomeric low-spin hemichrome, a dimeric high-spin aquomet six-coordinate derivative, and a dimeric high-spin five-coordinate species that prevail at acidic, neutral, and alkaline pH values, respectively. In the five-coordinate derivative, the iron atom is bound to a hydroxyl group on the distal side since the proximal Fe-histidine bond is broken, possibly due to the packing strain exerted by the Phe97 residue on the imidazole ring [Das, T. K., Boffi, A., Chiancone, E. and Rousseau, D. L. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 2916-2919]. To determine the proximal and distal effects on the coordination and spin state of the iron atom and on the association state, two heme pocket mutants have been investigated by means of optical absorption, resonance Raman spectroscopy, and analytical ultracentrifugation. Mutation of the distal histidine to an apolar valine causes dramatic changes in the coordination and spin state of the iron atom that lead to the formation of a five-coordinate derivative, in which the proximal Fe-histidine bond is retained, at acidic pH values and a high-spin, hydroxyl-bound six-coordinate derivative at neutral and alkaline pH values. At variance with native HbI, the His69 --> Val mutant is always high-spin and does not undergo dissociation into monomers at acidic pH values. The Phe97 --> Leu mutant, like the native protein, forms a monomeric hemichrome species at acidic pH values. However, at alkaline pH, it does not give rise to the unusual hydroxyl-bound five-coordinate derivative but forms a six-coordinate derivative with the proximal His and distal hydroxyl as iron ligands.  相似文献   

17.
Complex formation between ferricytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and ferricytochrome c from yeast [cyt(Y)] and horse heart [cyt(H)] was studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. On the basis of a detailed spectral analysis of the free proteins, it was possible to attribute changes in the spectra of the complexes to the individual proteins. At pH 7.0 both cyt(Y) and cyt(H) binding induces an increase in the six-coordinate low-spin configuration of CCP from 9% to 19% at the expense of the five-coordinate high-spin state, which drops from 84% to 74%. In the free and complexed state, CCP exhibits a constant fraction of the six-coordinate high-spin form (approximately 7%). In addition to affecting the coordination state, there is also a cyt-specific structural response of CCP to complexation. In the cyt(Y)-CCP complex, the peripheral vinyl and propionate substituents of CCP are more rigidly fixed in the protein matrix, whereas binding of cyt(H) only slightly perturbs the conformations of these side chains. The biological significance of the conformational changes in CCP are discussed. In contrast to CCP, there are no detectable structural changes in either cyt(Y) or cyt(H) upon complex formation.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The pH- and temperature-dependent changes in the coordination sphere of the heme c group of N alpha-acetyl microperoxidase-8 (Ac-MP-8) have been studied by examining its optical, resonance Raman, electron paramagnetic resonance, and magnetic circular dichroism spectra. An optical titration indicates that Ac-MP-8 exists in three major ionization forms over the pH 1-12 range that are linked by pK alpha values of approximately 3 and 9. The acid form that is present at pH 1.5 exists as a mixture of five- and six-coordinate high-spin species and most likely has water or buffer ions as axial ligand(s). On titration to pH 7, the His18 residue is deprotonated and becomes the proximal ligand to the iron to give a six-coordinate neutral form that has water as the sixth ligand. This form exists in a thermal high-spin intermediate-spin state equilibrium. On raising the pH to 10, an alkaline form is generated which is predominantly a five-coordinate high-spin species. It is formed by ionization of the proximal His18 residue to its imidazolate form with concomitant dissociation of the water ligand at the sixth site. At concentrations of Ac-MP-8 greater than 10 microM, some six-coordinate low-spin species are formed that are attributed to a dimer in which a His18 residue from a second molecule of Ac-MP-8 coordinates to the sixth site of another to give a bis-His complex. Raising the pH to 11.5 does not produce an appreciable amount of the six-coordinate complex with hydroxide as the sixth ligand. These studies show that Ac-MP-8 is a good water-soluble model for the peroxidases that exhibits minimal aggregation at concentrations below 10 microM in the neutral and alkaline pH regions.  相似文献   

20.
The pH-dependence of the oxidation state marker line v4 of human leucocyte myeloperoxidase is determined in the absence of chloride using Raman difference spectroscopy (RDS). A transition in the frequency of v4 with pK of 4.2 +/- 0.3 is found. The pK compares favorably with that previously determined by spectrophotometric titration and kinetic studies. The shift in v4 across the transition is -1.3 cm-1. The shift in v4 and other Raman marker lines indicates enhanced pi charge in the chlorin ring below the transition. The low frequencies of the oxidation state marker lines indicate that a structural change occurs near the chromophore, which results in the formation of a more pi-charge donating protein environment for the chlorin ring at low pH. The Raman results are discussed in terms of a proposed catalytic control mechanism based on charge stabilization of the energy of ring charge-depleted ferryl intermediates of the reaction with peroxide. The myeloperoxidase findings are compared with similar RDS results for ferrous horseradish peroxidase and ferric cytochrome c peroxidase.  相似文献   

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