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1.
I Morishima  M Hara 《Biochemistry》1983,22(17):4102-4107
In order to gain an insight into nonbonded interactions in the heme microenvironments of hemoproteins, proton NMR spectra of the cyanide and methylamine complexes of metmyoglobin and its derivatives reconstituted with deutero- and meso-hemins in H2O were studied under high pressures. The exchangeable NH proton of distal histidyl imidazole exhibits substantial pressure-induced shift while the proximal histidyl NH proton shows no pressure effect for the cyanide complexes. The heme peripheral proton signals, especially 5- and 8-methyl and vinyl C alpha H resonances, were also affected by pressure. These observations are interpreted as arising from pressure-induced structural changes in the heme crevice in which the pressure effects are localized to the distal side rather than the proximal side and from possible changes in the van der Waals contacts at the heme periphery with nearby amino acid residues.  相似文献   

2.
Kinetic and EPR studies show that the first step in the reaction of NO with ferric myoglobin, opossum hemoglobin, and microperoxidase is the reversible formation of the H-NO complex: H + NO in equilibrium H-NO (where H = Mb+, or Hb+ OP, or MP+). The NO-combination rates are markedly affected by the presence or absence of the distal histidine. The distal histidine significantly reduces the NO-combination rates, perhaps by interaction between the distal histidine and the ferric iron. Thus the beta-chains of Hb+ OP and metmyoglobin show similar combination rates. In the absence of a distal histidine, the NO-combination rates in the alpha-chains of Hb+ OP are much faster and similar to those observed for the five-coordinate heme in microperoxidase. The loss of a water molecule from the six-coordination site is assumed to be the rate-limiting step.  相似文献   

3.
The solution molecular and electronic structures of the active site in the extremely O2-avid hemoglobin from the trematode Paramphistomum epiclitum have been investigated by 1H NMR on the cyanomet form in order to elucidate the distal hydrogen-bonding to a ligated H-bond acceptor ligand. Comparison of the strengths of dipolar interactions in solution with the alternate crystal structures of methemoglobin establish that the solution structure of wild-type Hb more closely resembles the crystal structure of the recombinant wild-type than the true wild-type met-hemoglobin. The distal Tyr66(E7) is found oriented out of the heme pocket in solution as found in both crystal structures. Analysis of dipolar contacts, dipolar shift and paramagnetic relaxation establishes that the Tyr32(B10) hydrogen proton adopts an orientation that allows it to make a strong H-bond to the bound cyanide. The observation of a significant isotope effect on the heme methyl contact shifts confirms a strong contact between the Tyr32(B10) OH and the ligated cyanide. The quantitative determination of the orientation and anisotropies of the paramagnetic susceptibility tensor reveal that the cyanide is tilted approximately 10 degrees from the heme normal so as to avoid van der Waals overlap with the Tyr32(B10) Oeta. The pattern of heme contact shifts with large low-field shifts for 7-CH3 and 18-CH3 is shown to arise not from the 180 degrees rotation about the alpha-gamma-meso axis, but due to the approximately 45 degrees rotation of the axial His imidazole ring, relative to that in mammalian globins.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanism of the activation of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase by hemeproteins was investigated using the enzyme purified from bovine seminal vesicle microsomes. At pH 8, the maximal enzyme activities with methemoglobin (2 microM), indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (2 microM), and metmyoglobin (2 microM) were 70%, 42%, and 15% of that with 1 microM hematin. Apomyoglobin and apohemoglobin inhibited the enzyme activities caused by hemoproteins as well as that caused by hematin. The inhibition was removed by the addition of excess hematin. The dissociation of heme from hemoproteins was demonstrated by trapping the free heme with human albumin or to a DE-52 column. The dissociation of heme from methemoglobin was facilitated by increasing concentrations of arachidonic acid. The amount of heme dissociated from hemoproteins (methemoglobin, metmyoglobin, and indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase) in the presence of arachidonic acid correlated with their stimulatory effects on the prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase activity. Horseradish peroxidase and beef liver catalase, the hemes of which were not dissociated in the presence of arachidonic acid, were ineffective in activating prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase. Spectrophotometric titration of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase with hematin demonstrated that the enzyme bound hematin at the ratio of 1 mol/mol with an association constant of 0.6 x 10(8) M-1. From these results, we conclude that hemoproteins themselves are ineffective in activating prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase and free hematin dissociated from the hemoproteins by the interaction of arachidonic acid is the activating factor for the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Resonance Raman scattering experiments on CO-complexed cytochrome P-450scc from bovine adrenocortical mitochondria demonstrate the simultaneous enhancement of v(Fe-CO) stretching and bound v(C-O) stretching frequencies at 477 and 1953 cm-1, respectively. These assignments were made on the basis of frequency shifts with the isotope 12C18O. This unusually low v(Fe-CO) stretching frequency in cytochrome P-450scc, compared with other CO-complexed hemoproteins such as CO-hemoglobin and -myoglobin, is presumably due to the thiolate ligation to the heme iron trans to CO and due to the linear and perpendicular configuration of CO binding to the heme.  相似文献   

6.
Heme oxygenase (HO) catalyzes heme degradation by utilizing O(2) and reducing equivalents to produce biliverdin IX alpha, iron, and CO. To avoid product inhibition, the heme[bond]HO complex (heme[bond]HO) is structured to markedly increase its affinity for O(2) while suppressing its affinity for CO. We determined the crystal structures of rat ferrous heme[bond]HO and heme[bond]HO bound to CO, CN(-), and NO at 2.3, 1.8, 2.0, and 1.7 A resolution, respectively. The heme pocket of ferrous heme-HO has the same conformation as that of the previously determined ferric form, but no ligand is visible on the distal side of the ferrous heme. Fe[bond]CO and Fe[bond]CN(-) are tilted, whereas the Fe[bond]NO is bent. The structure of heme[bond]HO bound to NO is identical to that bound to N(3)(-), which is also bent as in the case of O(2). Notably, in the CO- and CN(-)-bound forms, the heme and its ligands shift toward the alpha-meso carbon, and the distal F-helix shifts in the opposite direction. These shifts allow CO or CN(-) to bind in a tilted fashion without a collision between the distal ligand and Gly139 O and cause disruption of one salt bridge between the heme and basic residue. The structural identity of the ferrous and ferric states of heme[bond]HO indicates that these shifts are not produced on reduction of heme iron. Neither such conformational changes nor a heme shift occurs on NO or N(3)(-) binding. Heme[bond]HO therefore recognizes CO and O(2) by their binding geometries. The marked reduction in the ratio of affinities of CO to O(2) for heme[bond]HO achieved by an increase in O(2) affinity [Migita, C. T., Matera, K. M., Ikeda-Saito, M., Olson, J. S., Fujii, H., Yoshimura, T., Zhou, H., and Yoshida, T. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 945-949] is explained by hydrogen bonding and polar interactions that are favorable for O(2) binding, as well as by characteristic structural changes in the CO-bound form.  相似文献   

7.
DevS is a heme-based sensor kinase required for sensing environmental conditions leading to nonreplicating persistence in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Kinase activity is observed when the heme is a ferrous five-coordinate high-spin or six-coordinate low-spin CO or NO complex but is strongly inhibited in the oxy complex. Discrimination between these exogenous ligands has been proposed to depend on a specific hydrogen bond network with bound oxygen. Here we report resonance Raman data and autophosphorylation assays of wild-type and Y171F DevS in various heme complexes. The Y171F mutation eliminates ligand discrimination for CO, NO, and O2, resulting in equally inactive complexes. In contrast, the ferrous-deoxy Y171F variant exhibits autokinase activity equivalent to that of the wild type. Raman spectra of the oxy complex of Y171F indicate that the environment of the oxy group is significantly altered from that in the wild type. They also suggest that a solvent molecule in the distal pocket substitutes for the Tyr hydroxyl group to act as a poorer hydrogen bond donor to the oxy group. The wild-type CO and NO complexes exist as a major population in which the CO or NO groups are free of hydrogen bonds, while the Y171F mutation results in a mild increase in the distal pocket polarity. The Y171F mutation has no impact on the proximal environment of the heme, and the activity observed with the five-coordinate ferrous-deoxy wild type is conserved in the Y171F variant. Thus, while the absence of an exogenous ligand in the ferrous-deoxy proteins leads to a moderate kinase activity, interactions between Tyr171 and distal diatomic ligands turn the kinase activity on and off. The Y171F mutation disrupts the on-off switch and renders all states with a distal ligand inactive. This mechanistic model is consistent with Tyr171 being required for distal ligand discrimination, but nonessential for autophosphorylation activity.  相似文献   

8.
Cao W  Christian JF  Champion PM  Rosca F  Sage JT 《Biochemistry》2001,40(19):5728-5737
Flash photolysis investigations of horse heart metmyoglobin bound with NO (Mb(3+)NO) reveal the kinetics of water entry and binding to the heme iron. Photodissociation of NO leaves the sample in the dehydrated Mb(3+) (5-coordinate) state. After NO photolysis and escape, a water molecule enters the heme pocket and binds to the heme iron, forming the 6-coordinate aquometMb state (Mb(3+)H2O). At longer times, NO displaces the H2O ligand to reestablish equilibrium. At 293 K, we determine a value k(w) approximately 5.7 x 10(6) s(-1) for the rate of H2O binding and estimate the H2O dissociation constant as 60 mM. The Arrhenius barrier height H(w) = 42 +/- 3 kJ/mol determined for H2O binding is identical to the barrier for CO escape after photolysis of Mb(2+)CO, within experimental uncertainty, consistent with a common mechanism for entry and exit of small molecules from the heme pocket. We propose that both processes are gated by displacement of His-64 from the heme pocket. We also observe that the bimolecular NO rebinding rate is enhanced by 3 orders of magnitude both for the H64L mutant, which does not bind water, and for the H64G mutant, where the bound water is no longer stabilized by hydrogen bonding with His-64. These results emphasize the importance of the hydrogen bond in stabilizing H2O binding and thus preventing NO scavenging by ferric heme proteins at physiological NO concentrations.  相似文献   

9.
Fungal nitric-oxide reductase (NOR) is a heme enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of NO to N(2)O through its ferric-NO complex, the first intermediate of the catalysis. Crystal structures of the ferric-NO forms of wild type (WT) fungal NOR, and of the Ser(286) --> Val and Ser(286) --> Thr mutant enzymes were determined to 1.7-A resolution at cryogenic temperature (100 K). This shows a slightly tilted and bent NO binding to the heme iron, in sharp contrast to the highly bent NO coordination found in ferrous hemoproteins. In the WT structure, a specific hydrogen-bonding network that connects the active site to the solvent was identified, H(2)O(Wat(74))-Ser(286)-H(2)O(Wat(33))-Asp(393)-solvent. Wat(74) is located 3.10 A from the iron-bound NO. Replacement of Ser(286) with Val or Thr scarcely alters the NO coordination structure but expels the water molecules, Wat(74) from the active site. The Asp(393) mutation does not influence the position of Wat(74), but disrupts the hydrogen-bonding network at Wat(33), as evidenced by enzymatic, kinetic, and spectroscopic (resonance Raman and IR) results. The structural changes observed upon the Ser(286) or the Asp(393) mutation are consistent with the dramatic loss of the enzymatic activity for the NO reduction of fungal NOR. We have conclusively identified the water molecule, Wat(74), adjacent to the iron-bound NO as a proton donor to the Fe-NO moiety. In addition, we find the hydrogen-bonding network, H(2)O(Wat(74))-Ser(286)-H(2)O(Wat(33))-Asp(393), as a proton delivery pathway in the NO reduction reaction by fungal NOR.  相似文献   

10.
Site-directed mutagenesis studies have confirmed that the distal histidine in myoglobin stabilizes bound O2 by hydrogen bonding and have suggested that it is the polar character of the imidazole side chain rather than its size that limits the rate of ligand entry into the protein. We constructed an isosteric Val68 to Thr replacement in pig myoglobin (i) to investigate whether the O2 affinity could be increased by the introduction of a second hydrogen-bonding group into the distal heme pocket and (ii) to examine the influence of polarity on the ligand binding rates more rigorously. The 1.9-A crystal structure of Thr68 aquometmyoglobin confirms that the mutant and wild-type proteins are essentially isostructural and reveals that the beta-OH group of Thr68 is in a position to form hydrogen-bonding interactions both with the coordinated water molecule and with the main chain greater than C=O of residue 64. The rate of azide binding to the ferric form of the Thr68 mutant was 60-fold lower than that for the wild-type protein, consistent with the proposed stabilization of the coordinated water molecule. However, bound O2 is destabilized in the ferrous form of the mutant protein. The observed 17-fold lowering of the O2 affinity may be a consequence of the hydrogen-bonding interaction made between the Thr68 beta-OH group and the carbonyl oxygen of residue 64. Overall association rate constants for O2, NO, and alkyl isocyanide binding to ferrous pig myoglobin were 3-10-fold lower for the mutant compared to the wild-type protein, whereas that for CO binding was little affected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Heme oxygenase (HO) catalyzes the regiospecific cleavage of the porphyrin ring of heme using reducing equivalents and O2 to produce biliverdin, iron, and CO. Because CO has a cytoprotective effect through the p38-MAPK pathway, HO is a potential therapeutic target in cancer. In fact, inhibition of the HO isoform HO-1 reduces Kaposi sarcoma tumor growth. Imidazole-dioxolane compounds have recently attracted attention because they have been reported to specifically inhibit HO-1, but not HO-2, unlike Cr-containing protoporphyrin IX, a classical inhibitor of HO, that inhibits not only both HO isoforms but also other hemoproteins. The inhibitory mechanism of imidazole-dioxolane compounds, however, has not yet been characterized. Here, we determine the crystal structure of the ternary complex of rat HO-1, heme, and an imidazole-dioxolane compound, 2-[2-(4-chlorophenyl)ethyl]-2-[(1H-imidazol-1-yl)methyl]-1,3-dioxolane. This compound bound on the distal side of the heme iron, where the imidazole and 4-chlorophenyl groups were bound to the heme iron and the hydrophobic cavity in HO, respectively. Binding of the bulky inhibitor in the narrow distal pocket shifted the distal helix to open the distal site and moved both the heme and the proximal helix. Furthermore, the biochemical characterization revealed that the catalytic reactions of both HO-1 and HO-2 were completely stopped after the formation of verdoheme in the presence of the imidazole-dioxolane compound. This result should be mainly due to the lower reactivity of the inhibitor-bound verdoheme with O2 compared to the reactivity of the inhibitor-bound heme with O2.  相似文献   

12.
A combined one-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect, paramagnetic-induced relaxation and two-dimensional sequence-specific 1H n.m.r. assignment of the spectrum of portions of the distal pocket of Aplysia cyano metMyoglobin (metMbCN) has been carried out in order to establish the presence and identity of distal residues in the heme pocket. In the absence of the usual distal E7 His in Aplysia Mb (E7 Val), the sequence-specific assignment of the E7 and E10 residues, together with their hyperfine shift patterns, relaxivities and dipolar connectivities to each other and the remainder of the E helix, reveal that the E10 Arg is turned into the pocket and hydrogen bonds to the bound cyanide group. We have previously found a similar rearrangement of the E10 Arg in Aplysia fluoro metMyoglobin, and the stabilizing effect of this residue was proposed to be responsible for the slow rate of cyanide dissociation from rapidly reduced ferrous Aplysia myoglobin. Based on the similar distal E7 His hydrogen-bonding interaction to the bound ligand in the crystal of sperm whale MbO2 and in solution of its cyano met complex, we propose that the E10 Arg similarly hydrogen bonds to the bound O2 in Aplysia MbO2 and accounts for its strong ligand binding and slow dissociation rate.  相似文献   

13.
Excellular hemoglobin is an extremely active oxidant of low-density lipoproteins (LDL), a phenomenon explained so far by different mechanisms. In this study, we analyzed the mechanism of met-hemoglobin oxidability by comparing its mode of operation with other hemoproteins, met-myoglobin and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or with free hemin. The kinetics of met-hemoglobin activity toward LDL lipids and protein differed from that of met-myoglobin and HRP, both quantitatively and qualitatively. Those differences were further clarified by analyzing heme transfer from the above-mentioned hemoproteins to LDL. It appeared that met-hemoglobin transferred most of its hemin to LDL, and the presence of H(2)O(2) accelerated the process. In contrast, met-myoglobin partially released hemin, but only in the presence of H(2)O(2), while HRP could not transfer heme at all. The minor amount of hemin transferred from met-myoglobin to LDL sufficed to trigger ApoB oxidation, forming covalent aggregates via inter-bityrosines. This indicated that heme bound to high affinity site(s) is responsible for oxidation. LDL components providing the sites were analyzed by binding heme-CO monomers to LDL. Soret spectra revealed that the high affinity site of monomeric hemin is located on the LDL protein, ApoB. The complex heme-CO-ApoB underwent instantaneous oxidation to hemin-ApoB, and the bound hemin then slowly disintegrated in conjunction with LDL oxidation. Hemopexin prevented LDL oxidation by trapping hemoprotein transferable heme. We concluded that met-hemoglobin exerts its oxidative activity on LDL via transfer of heme, which serves as a vehicle for iron insertion into the LDL protein, leading to formation of atherogenic LDL aggregates.  相似文献   

14.
Native oxymyoglobin (MbO2) was isolated directly from the skeletal muscle of bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus) with complete separation from metmyoglobin (metMb) on a CM-cellulose column. It was examined for its stability properties over a wide range of pH values (pH 5-12) in 0.1 M buffer at 25 degrees C. When compared with sperm whale MbO2 as a reference, the tuna MbO2 was found to be much more susceptible to autoxidation. Kinetic analysis has revealed that the rate constant for a nucleophilic displacement of O2- from MbO2 by an entering water molecule is 10-times higher than the corresponding value for sperm whale MbO2. The magnitude of the circular dichroism of bigeye tuna myoglobin at 222 nm was comparable to that of sperm whale myoglobin, but its hydropathy profile revealed the region corresponding to the distal side of the heme iron to be apparently less hydrophobic. The kinetic simulation also demonstrated that accessibility of the solvent water molecule to the heme pocket is clearly a key factor in the stability properties of the bound dioxygen.  相似文献   

15.
Distal pocket water molecules have been widely implicated in the delivery of protons required in O-O bond heterolysis in the P450 reaction cycle. Targeted dehydration of the cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) distal pocket through mutagenesis of a distal pocket glycine to either valine or threonine results in the alteration of spin state equilibria, and has dramatic consequences on the catalytic rate, coupling efficiency, and kinetic solvent isotope effect parameters, highlighting an important role of the active-site hydration level on P450 catalysis. Cryoradiolysis of the mutant CYP101 oxyferrous complexes further indicates a specific perturbation of proton-transfer events required for the transformation of ferric-peroxo to ferric-hydroperoxo states. Finally, crystallography of the 248Val and 248Thr mutants in both the ferric camphor bound resting state and ferric-cyano adducts shows both the alteration of hydrogen-bonding networks and the alteration of heme geometry parameters. Taken together, these results indicate that the distal pocket microenvironment governs the transformation of reactive heme-oxygen intermediates in P450 cytochromes.  相似文献   

16.
The 1H NMR spectrum of the low-spin, cyanide-ligated ferric complex of the myoglobin from the mollusc Aplysia limacina has been investigated. All of the resolved resonances from both the hemin and the proximal histidine have been assigned by a combination of isotope labeling, spin decoupling, analysis of differential paramagnetic relaxation, and nuclear Overhauser (NOE) experiments. The pattern of the heme contact shifts is unprecedented for low-spin ferric hemoproteins in exhibiting minimal rhombic asymmetry. This low in-plane asymmetry is correlated with the X-ray-determined orientation of the proximal histidyl imidazole plane relative to the heme and provides an important test case for the interpretation of hyperfine shifts of low-spin ferric hemoproteins. The bonding of the proximal histidine is shown to be similar to that in sperm whale myoglobin and is largely unperturbed by conformational transitions down to pH approximately 4. The two observed conformational transitions appear to be linked to the titration of the two heme propionate groups, which are suggested to exist in various orientations as a function of both pH and temperature. Heme orientational disorder in the ratio 5:1 was demonstrated by both isotope labeling and NOE experiments. The exchange rate with bulk water of the proximal histidyl labile ring proton is faster in Aplysia than in sperm whale myoglobin, consistent with a greater tendency for local unfolding of the heme pocket in the former protein. A similar increased heme pocket lability in Aplysia myoglobin has been noted in the rate of heme reorientation [Bellelli, A., Foon, R., Ascoli, F., & Brunori, M. (1987) Biochem. J. 246, 787-789].  相似文献   

17.
Although soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) functions in an environment in which O(2), NO, and CO are potential ligands for its heme moiety, the enzyme displays a high affinity for only its physiological ligand, NO, but has a limited affinity for CO and no affinity for O(2). Recent studies of a truncated version of the sGC beta(1)-subunit containing the heme-binding domain (Boon, E. M., Huang, S H., and Marletta, M. A. (2005) Nat. Chem. Biol., 1, 53-59) showed that introduction of the hydrogen-bonding tyrosine into the distal heme pocket changes the ligand specificity of the heme moiety and results in an oxygen-binding sGC. The hypothesis that the absence of hydrogen-bonding residues in the distal heme pocket is sufficient to provide oxygen discrimination by sGC was put forward. We tested this hypothesis in a context of a complete sGC heterodimer containing both the intact alpha(1)- and beta(1)-subunits. We found that the I145Y substitution in the full-length beta-subunit of the sGC heterodimer did not produce an oxygen-binding enzyme. However, this substitution impeded the association of NO and destabilized the NO.heme complex. The tyrosine in the distal heme pocket also impeded both the binding and dissociation of the CO ligand. We propose that the mechanism of oxygen exclusion by sGC not only involves the lack of hydrogen bonding in the distal heme pocket, but also depends on structural elements from other domains of sGC.  相似文献   

18.
Metmyoglobin catalyzes the decomposition of H2O2 as well as other hydroperoxides by using ascorbic acid as a substrate. The ratio of H2O2 reduced to ascorbate oxidized is close to one, whereas the rate of oxidation is directly proportional to both H2O2 and metmyoglobin concentrations. Ascorbate also prevents the protein modifications and the O2 evolution that accompany the reaction of metmyoglobin with hydroperoxides. In the absence of ascorbate, myoglobin and H2O2 promote the peroxidation of unsaturated fatty acids and, thus, may cause damage to cellular constituents. However, lipid peroxidation is inhibited in the presence of ascorbate and, for this reason, it is suggested that this heme protein functions in the opposite manner. The redox cycling of myoglobin by ascorbate may act as an important electron "sink" and defense mechanism against peroxides during oxidative challenge to muscle.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structure of rat heme oxygenase-1 in complex with biliverdin-iron chelate (biliverdin(Fe)-HO-1), the immediate precursor of the final product, biliverdin, has been determined at a 2.4-A resolution. The electron density in the heme pocket clearly showed that the tetrapyrrole ring of heme is cleaved at the alpha-meso edge. Like the heme bound to HO-1, biliverdin-iron chelate is located between the distal and proximal helices, but its accommodation state seems to be less stable in light of the disordering of the solvent-exposed propionate and vinyl groups. The middle of the distal helix is shifted away from the center of the active site in biliverdin(Fe)-HO-1, increasing the size of the heme pocket. The hydrogen-bonding interaction between Glu-29 and Gln-38, considered to restrain the orientation of the proximal helix in the heme-HO-1 complex, was lost in biliverdin(Fe)-HO-1, leading to relaxation of the helix. Biliverdin has a distorted helical conformation; the lactam oxygen atom of its pyrrole ring-A interacted with Asp-140 through a hydrogen-bonding solvent network. Because of the absence of a distal water ligand, the iron atom is five-coordinated with His-25 and four pyrrole nitrogen atoms. The coordination geometry deviates considerably from a square pyramid, suggesting that the iron may be readily dissociated. We speculate that the opened conformation of the heme pocket facilitates sequential product release, first iron then biliverdin, and that because of biliverdin's increased flexibility, iron release triggers its slow dissociation.  相似文献   

20.
The structure of horse heart metmyoglobin has been determined with a molecular replacement approach and subsequently refined using rigid body and restrained-parameter least squares methods to a conventional crystallographic R-factor of 0.16 for all observed reflections in the 6.0-2.8-A resolution range. The polypeptide chain of this protein is found to be organized into eight helical regions (labeled A-H) which collectively form a hydrophobic pocket in which the heme prosthetic group is bound. Our results show that the overall thermal motions of individual residues of horse heart metmyoglobin are correlated with their mean distances from the heme group. In comparisons with the structure of sperm whale metmyoglobin it has been found that horse heart metmyoglobin has unique polypeptide chain conformations in four regions. These include residues in the immediate vicinity of the amino and carboxyl termini, residues about Lys-16, and residues 117-124 which are in the interhelical region between helices G and H. Many of these conformational changes appear to occur as a consequence of a different pattern of salt-bridging interactions between charged residues on the surface of horse heart metmyoglobin. The overall average positional deviation observed between corresponding alpha-carbons in the polypeptide chains of horse heart and sperm whale metmyoglobin is 0.50 A. This value for atoms of the porphyrin core of the central heme group is 0.39 A. A total of 12 well defined water molecules and 1 sulfate ion are included in the current structural model of horse heart metmyoglobin. One of these water molecules is found to be coordinated to the heme iron atom and hydrogen bonded to the side chain of His-64. The sulfate ion is hydrogen bonded to amide groups at the amino-terminal end of the E-helix and, as well, forms similar interactions with the amino-terminal end of the D-helix of an adjacent protein molecule in the crystalline lattice.  相似文献   

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