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1.
Sahu SC  Simplaceanu V  Gong Q  Ho NT  Tian F  Prestegard JH  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2007,46(35):9973-9980
We present a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study in solution of the structures of human normal hemoglobin (Hb A) in the deoxy or unligated form in the absence and presence of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate (IHP), using 15N-1H residual dipolar coupling (RDC) measurements. There are several published crystal structures for deoxyhemoglobin A (deoxy-Hb A), and it has been reported that the functional properties of Hb A in single crystals are different from those in solution. Carbonmonoxyhemoglobin A (HbCO A) can also be crystallized in several structures. Our recent RDC studies of HbCO A in the absence and presence of IHP have shown that the solution structure of this Hb molecule is distinctly different from its classical crystal structures (R and R2). To have a better understanding of the structure-function relationship of Hb A under physiological conditions, we need to evaluate its structures in both ligated and unligated states in solution. Here, the intrinsic paramagnetic property of deoxy-Hb A has been exploited for the measurement of RDCs using the magnetic-field dependence of the apparent one-bond 1H-15N J couplings. Our RDC analysis suggests that the quaternary and tertiary structures of deoxy-Hb A in solution differ from its recently determined high-resolution crystal structures. Upon binding of IHP, structural changes in deoxy-Hb A are also observed, and these changes are largely within the alpha1beta1 (or alpha2beta2) dimer itself. These new structural findings allow us to gain a deeper insight into the structure-function relationship of this interesting allosteric protein.  相似文献   

2.
NMR relaxation measurements of 15N spin-lattice relaxation rate (R(1)), spin-spin relaxation rate (R(2)), and heteronuclear nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) have been carried out at 11.7T and 14.1T as a function of temperature for the side-chains of the tryptophan residues of 15N-labeled and/or (2H,15N)-labeled recombinant human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) and three recombinant mutant hemoglobins, rHb Kempsey (betaD99N), rHb (alphaY42D/betaD99N), and rHb (alphaV96W), in the carbonmonoxy and the deoxy forms as well as in the presence and in the absence of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). There are three Trp residues (alpha14, beta15, and beta37) in Hb A for each alphabeta dimer. These Trp residues are located in important regions of the Hb molecule, i.e. alpha14Trp and beta15Trp are located in the alpha(1)beta(1) subunit interface and beta37Trp is located in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface. The relaxation experiments show that amino acid substitutions in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface can alter the dynamics of beta37Trp. The transverse relaxation rate (R(2)) for beta37Trp can serve as a marker for the dynamics of the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface. The relaxation parameters of deoxy-rHb Kemspey (betaD99N), which is a naturally occurring abnormal human hemoglobin with high oxygen affinity and very low cooperativity, are quite different from those of deoxy-Hb A, even in the presence of IHP. The relaxation parameters for rHb (alphaY42D/betaD99N), which is a compensatory mutant of rHb Kempsey, are more similar to those of Hb A. In addition, TROSY-CPMG experiments have been used to investigate conformational exchange in the Trp residues of Hb A and the three mutant rHbs. Experimental results indicate that the side-chain of beta37Trp is involved in a relatively slow conformational exchange on the micro- to millisecond time-scale under certain experimental conditions. The present results provide new dynamic insights into the structure-function relationship in hemoglobin.  相似文献   

3.
Fang TY  Simplaceanu V  Tsai CH  Ho NT  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2000,39(45):13708-13718
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to construct three recombinant mutant hemoglobins (rHbs), rHb(beta L105W), rHb(alpha D94A/betaL105W), and rHb(alpha D94A). rHb(beta L105W) is designed to form a new hydrogen bond from beta 105Trp to alpha 94Asp in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface to lower the oxygen binding affinity by stabilizing the deoxy quaternary structure. We have found that rHb(beta L105W) does indeed possess a very low oxygen affinity and maintains normal cooperativity (P(50) = 28.2 mmHg, n(max) = 2.6 in 0.1 M sodium phosphate at pH 7.4) compared to those of Hb A (P(50) = 9.9 mmHg, n(max) = 3.2 at pH 7.4). rHb(alpha D94A/beta L105W) and rHb(alpha D94A) are expressed to provide evidence that rHb(betaL 105W) does form a new H-bond from beta 105Trp to alpha 94Asp in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface of the deoxy quaternary structure. Our multinuclear, multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies on (15)N-labeled rHb(beta L105W) have identified the indole nitrogen-attached (1)H resonance of beta 105Trp for rHb(beta L105W). (1)H NMR studies on Hb A and mutant rHbs have been used to investigate the structural basis for the low O(2) affinity of rHb(beta L105W). Our NMR results provide evidence that rHb(beta L105W) forms a new H-bond from beta 105Trp to alpha 94Asp in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface of the deoxy quaternary structure. The NMR results also show that these three rHbs can switch from the R quaternary structure to the T quaternary structure in their ligated state upon addition of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate. We propose that the low O(2) affinity of rHb(beta L105W) is due to the formation of a new H-bond between alpha 105Trp and alpha 94Asp in the deoxy quaternary structure.  相似文献   

4.
Nagatomo S  Nagai M  Shibayama N  Kitagawa T 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):10010-10020
The alpha1-beta2 subunit contacts in the half-ligated hemoglobin A (Hb A) have been explored with ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy using the Ni-Fe hybrid Hb under various solution conditions. Our previous studies demonstrated that Trpbeta37, Tyralpha42, and Tyralpha140 are mainly responsible for UVRR spectral differences between the complete T (deoxyHb A) and R (COHb A) structures [Nagai, M., Wajcman, H., Lahary, A., Nakatsukasa, T., Nagatomo, S., and Kitagawa, T. (1999) Biochemistry, 38, 1243-1251]. On the basis of it, the UVRR spectra observed for the half-ligated alpha(Ni)beta(CO) and alpha(CO)beta(Ni) at pH 6.7 in the presence of IHP indicated the adoption of the complete T structure similar to alpha(Ni)beta(deoxy) and alpha(deoxy)beta(Ni). The extent of the quaternary structural changes upon ligand binding depends on pH and IHP, but their characters are qualitatively the same. For alpha(Ni)beta(Fe), it is not until pH 8.7 in the absence of IHP that the Tyr bands are changed by ligand binding. The change of Tyr residues is induced by binding of CO, but not of NO, to the alpha heme, while it was similarly induced by binding of CO and NO to the beta heme. The Trp bands are changed toward R-like similarly for alpha(Ni)beta(CO) and alpha(CO)beta(Ni), indicating that the structural changes of Trp residues are scarcely different between CO binding to either the alpha or beta heme. The ligand induced quaternary structural changes of Tyr and Trp residues did not take place in a concerted way and were different between alpha(Ni)beta(CO) and alpha(CO)beta(Ni). These observations directly indicate that the phenomenon occurring at the alpha1-beta2 interface is different between the ligand binding to the alpha and beta hemes and is greatly influenced by IHP. A plausible mechanism of the intersubunit communication upon binding of a ligand to the alpha or beta subunit to the other subunit and its difference between NO and CO as a ligand are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Tsai CH  Fang TY  Ho NT  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2000,39(45):13719-13729
Using our Escherichia coli expression system, we have constructed rHb (beta N108Q), a new recombinant hemoglobin (rHb), with the amino acid substitution located in the alpha(1)beta(1) subunit interface and in the central cavity of the Hb molecule. rHb (beta N108Q) exhibits low oxygen affinity, high cooperativity, enhanced Bohr effect, and slower rate of autoxidation of the heme iron atoms from the Fe(2+) to the Fe(3+) state than other low-oxygen-affinity rHbs developed in our laboratory, e.g., rHb (alpha V96W) and rHb (alpha V96W, beta N108K). It has been reported by Olson and co-workers [Carver et al. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 14443-14450; Brantley et al. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 6995-7010] that the substitution of phenylalanine for leucine at position 29 of myoglobin can inhibit autoxidation in myoglobin and at position 29 of the alpha-chain of hemoglobin can lower NO reaction in both the deoxy and the oxy forms of human normal adult hemoglobin. Hence, we have further introduced this mutation, alpha L29F, into beta N108Q. rHb (alpha L29F, beta N108Q) is stabilized against auto- and NO-induced oxidation as compared to rHb (beta N108Q), but exhibits lower oxygen affinity at pH below 7.4 and good cooperativity as compared to Hb A. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies show that rHb (beta N108Q) has similar tertiary structure around the heme pockets and quaternary structure in the alpha(1)beta(1) and alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interfaces as compared to those of Hb A. The tertiary structure of rHb (alpha L29F, beta N108Q) as measured by (1)H NMR, especially the alpha-chain heme pocket region (both proximal and distal histidyl residues), is different from that of CO- and deoxy-Hb A, due to the amino acid substitution at alpha L29F. (1)H NMR studies also demonstrate that rHb (beta N108Q) can switch from the R quaternary structure to the T quaternary structure without changing ligation state upon adding an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate, and reducing the temperature. On the basis of its low oxygen affinity, high cooperativity, and stability against autoxidation, rHb (beta N108Q) is considered a potential candidate for the Hb-based oxygen carrier in a blood substitute system.  相似文献   

6.
Song XJ  Simplaceanu V  Ho NT  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2008,47(17):4907-4915
The present study reports distinct dynamic consequences for the T- and R-states of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) due to the binding of a heterotropic allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). A nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique based on modified transverse relaxation optimized spectroscopy (TROSY) has been used to investigate the effect of conformational exchange of Hb A in both deoxy and CO forms, in the absence and presence of IHP, at 14.1 and 21.1 T, and at 37 degrees C. Our results show that the majority of the polypeptide backbone amino acid residues of deoxy- and carbonmonoxy-forms of Hb A in the absence of IHP is not mobile on the micros-ms time scale, with the exception of several amino acid residues, that is, beta109Val and beta132Lys in deoxy-Hb A, and alpha40Lys in HbCO A. The mobility of alpha40Lys in HbCO A can be explained by the crystallographic data showing that the H-bond between alpha40Lys and beta146His in deoxy-Hb A is absent in HbCO A. However, the conformational exchange of beta109Val, which is located in the intradimer (alpha 1beta 1 or alpha 2beta 2) interface, is not consistent with the crystallographic observations that show rigid packing at this site. IHP binding appears to rigidify alpha40Lys in HbCO A, but does not significantly affect the flexibility of beta109Val in deoxy-Hb A. In the presence of IHP, several amino acid residues, especially those at the interdimer (alpha 1beta 2 or alpha 2beta 1) interface of HbCO A, exhibit significant conformational exchange. The affected residues include the proximal beta92His in the beta-heme pocket, as well as some other residues located in the flexible joint (betaC helix-alphaFG corner) and switch (alphaC helix-betaFG corner) regions that play an important role in the dimer-dimer rotation of Hb during the oxygenation process. These findings suggest that, upon IHP binding, HbCO A undergoes a conformational fluctuation near the R-state but biased toward the T-state, apparently along the trajectory of its allosteric transition, accompanied by structural fluctuations in the heme pocket of the beta-chain. In contrast, no significant perturbation of the dynamic features on the ms-micros time scale has been observed upon IHP binding to deoxy-Hb A. We propose that the allosteric effector-induced quaternary structural fluctuation may contribute to the reduced ligand affinity of ligated hemoglobin. Conformational exchange mapping of the beta-chain of HbCO A observed at 21.1 T shows significantly increased scatter in the chemical exchange contribution to the transverse relaxation rate ( R ex) values, relative to those at lower fields, due to the enhanced effect of the local chemical shift anisotropy (CSA) fluctuation. A spring-on-scissors model is proposed to interpret the dynamic phenomena induced by the heterotropic effector, IHP.  相似文献   

7.
M Nagai  S Nagatomo  Y Nagai  K Ohkubo  K Imai  T Kitagawa 《Biochemistry》2012,51(30):5932-5941
The aromatic residues such as tryptophan (Trp) and tyrosine (Tyr) in human adult hemoglobin (Hb A) are known to contribute to near-UV circular dichroism (CD) and UV resonance Raman (RR) spectral changes upon the R → T quaternary structure transition. In Hb A, there are three Trp residues per αβ dimer: at α14, β15, and β37. To evaluate their individual contributions to the R → T spectral changes, we produced three mutant hemoglobins in E. coli; rHb (α14Trp→Leu), rHb (β15Trp→Leu), and rHb (β37Trp→His). Near-UV CD and UVRR spectra of these mutant Hbs were compared with those of Hb A under solvent conditions where mutant rHbs exhibited significant cooperativity in oxygen binding. Near-UV CD and UVRR spectra for individual Trp residues were extracted by the difference calculations between Hb A and the mutants. α14 and β15Trp exhibited negative CD bands in both oxy- and deoxy-Hb A, whereas β37Trp showed positive CD bands in oxy-Hb A but decreased intensity in deoxy-form. These differences in CD spectra among the three Trp residues in Hb A were ascribed to surrounding hydrophobicity by examining the spectral changes of a model compound of Trp, N-acetyl-l-Trp ethyl ester, in various solvents. Intensity enhancement of Trp UVRR bands upon the R → T transition was ascribed mostly to the hydrogen-bond formation of β37Trp in deoxy-Hb A because similar UVRR spectral changes were detected with N-acetyl-l-Trp ethyl ester upon addition of a hydrogen-bond acceptor.  相似文献   

8.
Four recombinant mutants of human fetal hemoglobin [Hb F (alpha2gamma2)] with amino acid substitutions at the position 43 of the gamma-chain, rHb (gammaD43L), rHb (gammaD43E), rHb (gammaD43W), and rHb (gammaD43R), have been expressed in our Escherichia coli expression system and used to investigate their inhibitory effect on the polymerization of deoxygenated sickle cell hemoglobin (Hb S). Oxygen-binding studies show that rHb (gammaD43E), rHb (gammaD43W), and rHb (gammaD43R) exhibit higher oxygen affinity than human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A), Hb F, or rHb (gammaD43L), and all four rHbs are cooperative in binding O2. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies of these four rHbs indicate that the quaternary and tertiary structures around the heme pockets are similar to those of Hb F in both deoxy (T) and liganded (R) states. Solution light-scattering experiments indicate that these mutants remain mostly tetrameric in the liganded (R) state. In equimolar mixtures of Hb S and each of the four rHb mutants (gammaD43L, gammaD43E, gammaD43R, and gammaD43W), the solubility (Csat) of each of the pairs of Hbs is higher than that of a similar mixture of Hb S and Hb A, as measured by dextran-Csat experiments. Furthermore, the Csat values for Hb S/rHb (gammaD43L), Hb S/rHb (gammaD43E), and Hb S/rHb (gammaD43R) mixtures are substantially higher than that for Hb S/Hb F. The results suggest that these three mutants of Hb F are more effective than Hb F in inhibiting the polymerization of deoxy-Hb S in equimolar mixtures.  相似文献   

9.
Three recombinant mutant hemoglobins (rHbs) of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A), rHb (alphaT67V), rHb (betaS72A), and rHb (alphaT67V, betaS72A), have been constructed to test the role of the tertiary intra-subunit H-bonds between alpha67T and alpha14W and between beta72S and beta15W in the cooperative oxygenation of Hb A. Oxygen-binding studies in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer at 29 degrees C show that rHb (alphaT67V), rHb (betaS72A), and rHb (alphaT67V, betaS72A) exhibit oxygen-binding properties similar to those of Hb A. The binding of oxygen to these rHbs is highly cooperative, with a Hill coefficient of approximately 2.8, compared to approximately 3.1 for Hb A. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies show that rHb (alphaT67V), rHb (betaS72A), rHb (alphaT67V, betaS72A), and Hb A have similar quaternary structures in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interfaces. In particular, the inter-subunit H-bonds between alpha42Tyr and beta99Asp and between beta37Trp and alpha94Asp are maintained in the mutants in the deoxy form. There are slight perturbations in the distal heme pocket region of the alpha- and beta-chains in the mutants. A comparison of the exchangeable 1H resonances of Hb A with those of these three rHbs suggests that alpha67T and beta72S are H-bonded to alpha14W and beta15W, respectively, in the CO and deoxy forms of Hb A. The absence of significant free energy changes for the oxygenation process of these three rHbs compared to those of Hb A, even though the inter-helical H-bonds are abolished, indicates that these two sets of H-bonds are of comparable strength in the ligated and unligated forms of Hb A. Thus, the mutations at alphaT67V and betaS72A do not affect the overall energetics of the oxygenation process. The preserved cooperativity in the binding of oxygen to these three mutants also implies that there are multiple interactions involved in the oxygenation process of Hb A.  相似文献   

10.
Specific ligation states of hemoglobin are, when crystallized, capable of taking on multiple quaternary structures. The relationship between these structures, captured in crystal lattices, and hemoglobin structure in solution remains uncertain. Wide-angle X-ray solution scattering (WAXS) is a sensitive probe of protein structure in solution that can distinguish among similar structures and has the potential to contribute to these issues. We used WAXS to assess the relationships among the structures of human and bovine hemoglobins in different liganded forms in solution. WAXS data readily distinguished among the various forms of hemoglobins. WAXS patterns confirm some of the relationships among hemoglobin structures that have been defined through crystallography and NMR and extend others. For instance, methemoglobin A in solution is, as expected, nearly indistinguishable from HbCO A. Interestingly, for bovine hemoglobin, the differences between deoxy-Hb, methemoglobin and HbCO are smaller than the corresponding differences in human hemoglobin. WAXS data were also used to assess the spatial extent of structural fluctuations of various hemoglobins in solution. Dynamics has been implicated in allosteric control of hemoglobin, and increased dynamics has been associated with lowered oxygen affinity. Consistent with that notion, WAXS patterns indicate that deoxy-Hb A exhibits substantially larger structural fluctuations than HbCO A. Comparisons between the observed WAXS patterns and those predicted on the basis of atomic coordinate sets suggest that the structures of Hb in different liganded forms exhibit clear differences from known crystal structures.  相似文献   

11.
Levantino M  Cupane A  Zimányi L 《Biochemistry》2003,42(15):4499-4505
Using a sol-gel encapsulation technique, we have prepared samples of CO saturated human adult hemoglobin locked in the R or T quaternary conformation. We report time-resolved spectra of these samples in the Soret region following flash photolysis, in the time interval ranging from 250 ns to 200 ms and in the temperature interval of 100-170 K. A suitable analysis of the measured difference spectra enables us to obtain the spectral contribution of deoxyHb and HbCO molecules as a function of time and/or of the fraction N(t) of deoxyHb molecules. In our experimental time window geminate CO rebinding to hemoglobin in the T quaternary conformation is about 2 orders of magnitude slower than to hemoglobin in the R conformation: this suggests that the barrier distribution for the CO rebinding, g(H), depends strongly on the protein quaternary structure. In our temperature interval, spectral shifts due to kinetic hole burning (KHB) are present: for HbCO the KHB effect is large in the R conformation and small in the T conformation. For deoxyHb the opposite is true. We attribute the observed behavior to the effect of interconversion between the relevant substates. This effect is stronger for HbCO molecules in the T conformation and for deoxyHb molecules in the R conformation; it confirms the quaternary structure dependence of the hemoglobin energy landscape and suggests enhanced dynamics of ligation intermediate species such as T-state HbCO or R-state deoxyHb.  相似文献   

12.
We have measured the forward and reverse rates of the allosteric transition between R (relaxed) and T (tense) quaternary structures for oxyhemoglobin A from which a single oxygen molecule was removed in pH 7, phosphate buffer, using the method of modulated excitation (Ferrone, F.A., and J.J. Hopfield. 1976. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 73:4497-4501 and Ferrone, F.A., A.J. Martino, and S. Basak. 1985. Biophys. J. 48:269-282). Despite the low quantum yield, which necessitated large light levels and an associated temperature rise, the data was of superior quality to the equivalent experiment with CO as a ligand, permitting comparison between the allosteric behavior of hemoglobin with different ligands. Qualitatively, the T structure is favored more strongly in triligated oxyhemoglobin than triligated carboxyhemoglobin. The rates for the allosteric transition with oxygen bound were essentially temperature independent, whereas for CO both the R----T and T----R rates increased with temperature, having an activation energy of 2.2 and 2.8 kcal, respectively. The R----T rate was higher for O2 than for CO being 3 x 10(3) s-1 vs. 1.6 x 10(3) s-1 for HbCO at 25 degrees C. The T----R rate for HbO2 was only 2 x 10(3) s-1, vs 4.2 x 10(3) s-1 for HbCO, giving an equilibrium constant between the structures greater than unity (L3 = 1.5). The data suggest that there may be some allosteric inequality between the subunits, but do not require (or rule out) ligand binding heterogeneity. The ligand-dependent differences are compatible with stereochemical studies of HbCO and HbO2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
C H Tsai  T J Shen  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1999,38(27):8751-8761
Using our Escherichia coli expression system, we have produced five mutant recombinant (r) hemoglobins (Hbs): r Hb (alpha V96 W), r Hb Presbyterian (beta N108K), r Hb Yoshizuka (beta N108D), r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108K), and r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108D). These r Hbs allow us to investigate the effect on the structure-function relationship of Hb of replacing beta 108Asn by either a positively charged Lys or a negatively charged Asp as well as the effect of replacing alpha 96Val by a bulky, nonpolar Trp. We have conducted oxygen-binding studies to investigate the effect of several allosteric effectors on the oxygenation properties and the Bohr effects of these r Hbs. The oxygen affinity of these mutants is lower than that of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) under various experimental conditions. The oxygen affinity of r Hb Yoshizuka is insensitive to changes in chloride concentration, whereas the oxygen affinity of r Hb Presbyterian exhibits a pronounced chloride effect. r Hb Presbyterian has the largest Bohr effect, followed by Hb A, r Hb (alpha V96W), and r Hb Yoshizuka. Thus, the amino acid substitution in the central cavity that increases the net positive charge enhances the Bohr effect. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies demonstrate that these r Hbs can switch from the R quaternary structure to the T quaternary structure without changing their ligation states upon the addition of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate, and/or by reducing the temperature. r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108K), which has the lowest oxygen affinity among the hemoglobins studied, has the greatest tendency to switch to the T quaternary structure. The following conclusions can be derived from our results: First, if we can stabilize the deoxy (T) quaternary structure of a hemoglobin molecule without perturbing its oxy (R) quaternary structure, we will have a hemoglobin with low oxygen affinity and high cooperativity. Second, an alteration of the charge distribution by amino acid substitutions in the alpha 1 beta 1 subunit interface and in the central cavity of the hemoglobin molecule can influence the Bohr effect. Third, an amino acid substitution in the alpha 1 beta 1 subunit interface can affect both the oxygen affinity and cooperativity of the oxygenation process. There is communication between the alpha 1 beta 1 and alpha 1 beta 2 subunit interfaces during the oxygenation process. Fourth, there is considerable cooperativity in the oxygenation process in the T-state of the hemoglobin molecule.  相似文献   

14.
Mueser TC  Rogers PH  Arnone A 《Biochemistry》2000,39(50):15353-15364
Initial crystallographic studies suggested that fully liganded mammalian hemoglobin can adopt only a single quaternary structure, the quaternary R structure. However, more recent crystallographic studies revealed the existence of a second quaternary structure for liganded hemoglobin, the quaternary R2 structure. Since these quaternary structures can be crystallized, both must be energetically accessible structures that coexist in solution. Unanswered questions include (i) the relative abundance of the R and R2 structures under various solution conditions and (ii) whether other quaternary structures are energetically accessible for the liganded alpha(2)beta(2) hemoglobin tetramer. Although crystallographic methods cannot directly answer the first question, they represent the most direct and most accurate approach to answering the second question. We now have determined and refined three different crystal structures of bovine carbonmonoxyhemoglobin. These structures provide clear evidence that the dimer-dimer interface of liganded hemoglobin has a wide range of energetically accessible structures that are related to each other by a simple sliding motion. The dimer-dimer interface acts as a "molecular slide bearing" that allows the two alpha beta dimers to slide back and forth without greatly altering the number or the nature of the intersubunit contacts. Since the general stereochemical features of this interface are not unusual, it is likely that interface sliding of the kind displayed by fully liganded hemoglobin plays important structural and functional roles in many other protein assemblies.  相似文献   

15.
Studies of high spin ferrous and ferric derivatives led us to conclude that in the quaternary R structure the state of the hemes is similar to that in the free alpha and beta subunits, but in the T structure a tension acts on the hemes which tries to pull the iron and the proximal histidine further from the plane of the porphyrin. We have now studied the effect of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) on the three low spin ferrous compounds of hemoglobin with O2, CO, and NO. IHP failed to switch the quaternary structure of carbonmonoxy- and oxyhemoglobin A to the T state, but merely caused a transition to an as yet undefined modification of the R structure. IHP is known to cause a switch to the T structure in hemoglobin Kansas. We have found that this switch induces red shifts of the visible alpha and beta absorption bands and the appearance of a shoulder on the red side of the alpha band; these changes are very weak in carbonmonoxy- and slightly stronger in oxyhemoglobin Kansas. As already noted by previous authors, addition of IHP to nitrosylhemoglobin A induces all the changes in uv absorption and CD spectra, sulfhydryl reactivities, and exchangeable proton resonances normally associated with the R leads to T transition, and is accompanied by large changes in the Soret and visible absorption bands. Experiments with nitrosyl hybrids show that these changes in absorption are caused predominantly by the hemes in the alpha subunits. In the accompanying paper Maxwell and Caughey (J. C. Maxwell and W. S. Caughey (1976), Biochemistry, following paper in this issue) report that the NO in nitrosylhemoglobin without IHP gives a single ir stretching frequency characteristic for six-coordinated nitrosyl hemes; addition of IHP causes the appearance of a second ir band, of intensity equal to that of the first, which is characteristic for five-coordinated nitrosyl hemes. Taken together, these results show that the R leads to T transition causes either a rupture or at least a very dramatic stretching of the bond from the iron to the heme-linked histidine, such that an equilibrium is set up between five- and six-coordinated hemes, biased toward five-coordinated hemes in the alpha and six-coordinated ones in the beta subunits. The reason why IHP can switch nitrosyl-, but not carbonmonoxy- or oxyhemoglobin A, from the R to the T structure is to be found in the weakening of the iron-histidine bond by the unpaired NO electron and by the very short Fe-NO bond length.  相似文献   

16.
In this work, we use a sol-gel protocol to trap and compare the R and T quaternary states of both the deoxygenated (deoxyHb) and carbonmonoxide (HbCO) derivatives of human hemoglobin. The near infrared optical absorption band III and the infrared CO stretching band are used to detect the effect of quaternary structure on the spectral properties of deoxyHb and HbCO; comparison with myoglobin allows for an assessment of tertiary and quaternary contributions to the measured band shifts. The R<-->T transition is shown to cause a blue shift of the band III by approximately 35 cm(-1) for deoxyHb and a red shift of the CO stretching band by only approximately 0.3 cm(-1) for HbCO. This clearly shows that quaternary structure changes are transmitted to the heme pocket and that effects on deoxyHb are much larger than on HbCO, at least as far as the band energies are concerned. Experiments performed in the ample temperature interval of 300-10K show that the above quaternary structure effects are "static" and do not influence the dynamic properties of the heme pocket, at least as probed by the temperature dependence of band III and of the CO stretching band. The availability of quaternary structure sensitive spectroscopic markers and the quantitative measurement of the quaternary structure contribution to band shifts will be of considerable help in the analysis of flash-photolysis experiments on hemoglobin. Moreover, it will enable one to characterize the dynamic properties of functionally relevant hemoglobin intermediates and to study the kinetics of both the T-->R and R-->T quaternary transitions through time-resolved spectroscopy.  相似文献   

17.
The abnormal human hemoglobin Malm? (beta97FG4 His leads to Gln) has been studied and its properties are compared with those of normal adult hemoglobin A. The data presented here show that the ring-current shifted proton resonances of both HbCO and HbO2 Malm? are very different from the corresponding forms of Hb A. The hyperfine shifted proton resonances of deoxy-Hb Malm? do not differ drastically from those of deoxy-Hb A. This result, together with the finding that the exchangeable proton resonances of the deoxy form of the two hemoglobins are similar, suggests that unliganded Hb Malm? can assume a deoxy-like quaternary structure both in the absence and presence of organic phosphates We have also compared the properties of Hb Malm? with those of Hb Chesapeake (alpha92FG4 Arg leads to Leu). This allows us to study the properties of two abnormal human hemoglobins with mutations at homologous positions of the alpha and beta chains in the three-dimenstional structure of the hemoglobin molecule. Our present results suggest that the mutaion at betaFG4 has its greatest effect on the teritiary structure of the heme pocket of the liganded forms of the hemoglobin while the mutation at alphaFG4 alters the deoxy structure of the hemoglogin molecule but does not alter the teriary structure of the heme pockets of the liganded form of the hemoglobin molecule. Both hemoglobins undergo a transition from the deoxy (T) to the oxy (R) quaternary structure upon ligation. The abnormally high oxygen affinities and low cooperativities of these two hemoglobins must therefore be due to either the structural differences which we have observed and/or to an altered transition between the T and R structures.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The kinetics of geminate recombination for the diliganded species alpha 2CO beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2CO of human hemoglobin were studied using flash photolysis. The unstable diliganded species were generated just before photolysis by chemical reduction in a continuous flow reactor from the more stable valency hybrids alpha 2CO beta 2+ and alpha 2+ beta 2CO, which could be prepared by high pressure liquid chromatography. Before the flash photolysis studies, the hybrids had been characterized by double-mixing stopped-flow kinetics experiments. At pH 6.0 in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) both of the diliganded species show second order kinetics for overall addition of a third CO that is clearly characteristic of the T state (l' = 1-2 x 10(5) M-1 s-1), whereas at higher pH and in the absence of IHP they show combination rates characteristic of an R state. The kinetics of geminate recombination following photolysis of a bound CO, however, showed little dependence on pH and IHP concentration. This surprising observation is explained on the basis that the kinetics of geminate recombination of CO primarily depends on the tertiary structure of the ligand binding site, which apparently does not differ much between the R state and the liganded T state formed on adding IHP in this system. Since this explanation requires distinguishing different tertiary structures within a particular quaternary structure, it amounts to a contradiction to the two-state allosteric model.  相似文献   

20.
Yuan Y  Simplaceanu V  Ho NT  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2010,49(50):10606-10615
On the basis of X-ray crystal structures and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements, it has been inferred that the O(2) binding to hemoglobin is stabilized by the hydrogen bonds between the oxygen ligands and the distal histidines. Our previous study by multinuclear nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has provided the first direct evidence of such H-bonds in human normal adult oxyhemoglobin (HbO(2) A) in solution. Here, the NMR spectra of uniformly (15)N-labeled recombinant human Hb A (rHb A) and five mutant rHbs in the oxy form have been studied under various experimental conditions of pH and temperature and also in the presence of an organic phosphate, inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). We have found significant effects of pH and temperature on the strength of the H-bond markers, i.e., the cross-peaks for the side chains of the two distal histidyl residues, α58His and β63His, which form H-bonds with the O(2) ligands. At lower pH and/or higher temperature, the side chains of the distal histidines appear to be more mobile, and the exchange with water molecules in the distal heme pockets is faster. These changes in the stability of the H-bonds with pH and temperature are consistent with the changes in the O(2) affinity of Hb as a function of pH and temperature and are clearly illustrated by our NMR experiments. Our NMR results have also confirmed that this H-bond in the β-chain is weaker than that in the α-chain and is more sensitive to changes in pH and temperature. IHP has only a minor effect on these H-bond markers compared to the effects of pH and temperature. These H-bonds are sensitive to mutations in the distal heme pockets but not affected directly by the mutations in the quaternary interfaces, i.e., α(1)β(1) and/or α(1)β(2) subunit interface. These findings provide new insights regarding the roles of temperature, hydrogen ion, and organic phosphate in modulating the structure and function of hemoglobin in solution.  相似文献   

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