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1.
Nitric oxide (NO) is the physiologically relevant activator of the mammalian hemoprotein soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). The heme cofactor of α1β1 sGC has a high affinity for NO but has never been observed to form a complex with oxygen. Introduction of a key tyrosine residue in the sGC heme binding domain β1(1–385) is sufficient to produce an oxygen-binding protein, but this mutation in the full-length enzyme did not alter oxygen affinity. To evaluate ligand binding specificity in full-length sGC we mutated several conserved distal heme pocket residues (β1 Val-5, Phe-74, Ile-145, and Ile-149) to introduce a hydrogen bond donor in proximity to the heme ligand. We found that the NO coordination state, NO dissociation, and enzyme activation were significantly affected by the presence of a tyrosine in the distal heme pocket; however, the stability of the reduced porphyrin and the proteins affinity for oxygen were unaltered. Recently, an atypical sGC from Drosophila, Gyc-88E, was shown to form a stable complex with oxygen. Sequence analysis of this protein identified two residues in the predicted heme pocket (tyrosine and glutamine) that may function to stabilize oxygen binding in the atypical cyclase. The introduction of these residues into the rat β1 distal heme pocket (Ile-145 → Tyr and Ile-149 → Gln) resulted in an sGC construct that oxidized via an intermediate with an absorbance maximum at 417 nm. This absorbance maximum is consistent with globin FeII-O2 complexes and is likely the first observation of a FeII-O2 complex in the full-length α1β1 protein. Additionally, these data suggest that atypical sGCs stabilize O2 binding by a hydrogen bonding network involving tyrosine and glutamine.  相似文献   

2.
The complete structure of the assembled domains of nitric oxide-sensitive guanylate cyclase (NOsGC) remains to be determined. It is also unknown how binding of NO to heme in guanylate cyclase is communicated to the catalytic domain. In the current study the conformational change of guanylate cyclase on activation by NO was studied using FRET. Endogenous tryptophan residues were used as donors, the substrate analog 2′-Mant-3′-dGTP as acceptor. The enzyme contains five tryptophan residues distributed evenly over all four functional domains. This provides a unique opportunity to detect the movement of the functional domains relative to the substrate-binding catalytic region. FRET measurements indicate that NO brings tryptophan 22 in the αB helix of the β1 heme NO binding domain and tryptophan 466 in the second short helix of the α1 coiled-coil domain closer to the catalytic domain. We propose that the respective domains act as a pair of tongs forcing the catalytic domain into the nitric oxide-activated conformation.  相似文献   

3.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is the mammalian endogenous nitric oxide (NO) receptor. The mechanisms of activation and deactivation of this heterodimeric enzyme are unknown. For deciphering them, functional domains can be overexpressed. We have probed the dynamics of the diatomic ligands NO and CO within the isolated heme domain β(1)(190) of human sGC by piconanosecond absorption spectroscopy. After photo-excitation of nitrosylated sGC, only NO geminate rebinding occurs in 7.5 ps. In β(1)(190), both photo-dissociation of 5c-NO and photo-oxidation occur, contrary to sGC, followed by NO rebinding (7 ps) and back-reduction (230 ps and 2 ns). In full-length sGC, CO geminate rebinding to the heme does not occur. In contrast, CO geminately rebinds to β(1)(190) with fast multiphasic process (35, 171, and 18 ns). We measured the bimolecular association rates k(on) = 0.075 ± 0.01 × 10(6) M(-1) · S(-1) for sGC and 0.83 ± 0.1 × 10(6) M(-1) · S(-1) for β(1)(190). These different dynamics reflect conformational changes and less proximal constraints in the isolated heme domain with respect to the dimeric native sGC. We concluded that the α-subunit and the β(1)(191-619) domain exert structural strains on the heme domain. These strains are likely involved in the transmission of the energy and relaxation toward the activated state after Fe(2+)-His bond breaking. This also reveals the heme domain plasticity modulated by the associated domains and subunit.  相似文献   

4.
Nitric oxide (NO) signaling regulates key processes in cardiovascular physiology, specifically vasodilation, platelet aggregation, and leukocyte rolling. Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), the mammalian NO sensor, transduces an NO signal into the classical second messenger cyclic GMP (cGMP). NO binds to the ferrous (Fe2+) oxidation state of the sGC heme cofactor and stimulates formation of cGMP several hundred-fold. Oxidation of the sGC heme to the ferric (Fe3+) state desensitizes the enzyme to NO. The heme-oxidized state of sGC has emerged as a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of cardiovascular disease. Here, we investigate the molecular mechanism of NO desensitization and find that sGC undergoes a reductive nitrosylation reaction that is coupled to the S-nitrosation of sGC cysteines. We further characterize the kinetics of NO desensitization and find that heme-assisted nitrosothiol formation of β1Cys-78 and β1Cys-122 causes the NO desensitization of ferric sGC. Finally, we provide evidence that the mechanism of reductive nitrosylation is gated by a conformational change of the protein. These results yield insights into the function and dysfunction of sGC in cardiovascular disease.  相似文献   

5.
The nature of the metal-proximal base bond of soluble guanylate cyclase from bovine lung was examined by EPR spectroscopy. When the ferrous enzyme was mixed with NO, a new species was transiently produced and rapidly converted to a five-coordinate ferrous NO complex. The new species exhibited the EPR signal of six-coordinate ferrous NO complex with a feature of histidine-ligated heme. The histidine ligation was further examined by using the cobalt protoporphyrin IX-substituted enzyme. The Co2+-substituted enzyme exhibited EPR signals of a broad g perpendicular;1 component and a g;1 component with a poorly resolved triplet of 14N superhyperfine splittings, which was indicative of the histidine ligation. These EPR features were analogous to those of alpha-subunits of Co2+-hemoglobin in tense state, showing a tension on the iron-histidine bond of the enzyme. The binding of NO to the Co2+-enzyme markedly stimulated the cGMP production by forming the five-coordinate NO complex. We found that N3- elicited the activation of the ferric enzyme by yielding five-coordinate high spin N3- heme. These results indicated that the activation of the enzymes was initiated by NO binding to the metals and proceeded via breaking of the metal-histidine bonds, and suggested that the iron-histidine bond in the ferric enzyme heme was broken by N3- binding.  相似文献   

6.
Chlorite dismutase (EC 1.13.11.49), an enzyme capable of reducing chlorite to chloride while producing molecular oxygen, has been characterized using EPR and optical spectroscopy. The EPR spectrum of GR-1 chlorite dismutase shows two different high-spin ferric heme species, which we have designated 'narrow' (gx,y,z = 6.24, 5.42, 2.00) and 'broad' (gz,y,x = 6.70, 5.02, 2.00). Spectroscopic evidence is presented for a proximal histidine co-ordinating the heme iron center of the enzyme. The UV/visible spectrum of the ferrous enzyme and EPR spectra of the ferric hydroxide and imidazole adducts are characteristic of a heme protein with an axial histidine co-ordinating the iron. Furthermore, the substrate analogs nitrite and hydrogen peroxide have been found to bind to ferric chlorite dismutase. EPR spectroscopy of the hydrogen peroxide adduct shows the loss of both high-spin and low-spin ferric signals and the appearance of a sharp radical signal. The NO adduct of the ferrous enzyme exhibits a low-spin EPR signal typical of a five-co-ordinate heme iron nitrosyl adduct. It seems that the bond between the proximal histidine and the iron is weak and can be broken upon binding of NO. The midpoint potential, Em(Fe3+/2+) = -23 mV, of chlorite dismutase is higher than for most heme enzymes. The spectroscopic features and redox properties of chlorite dismutase are more similar to the gas-sensing hemoproteins, such as guanylate cyclase and the globins, than to the heme enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
The role of NO . catalase in the activation of partially purified soluble guanylate cyclase of rat liver by NaN3 and NH2OH was examined by electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Equilibration of bovine liver catalase with NO resulted in formation of a paramagnetic species exhibiting a three-line ESR spectrum similar to that of NO . catalase. This paramagnetic complex produced concentration-dependent stimulation of preparations of partially purified guanylate cyclase that were devoid of detectable endogenous heme content. The stimulation of partially purified guanylate cyclase by NO . catalase was similar to that obtained with NO . hemoglobin and with NO . cytochrome P-420 prepared by reaction of hepatic microsomes of phenobarbital-treated rats with NO. By contrast, these same enzyme preparations did not respond to NO or catalase alone. Addition of hematin or hemoglobin plus a reducing agent to purified guanylate cyclase restored enzyme responsiveness to NO and N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG), but not to NaN3 or NH2OH. Responses to the latter agents were restored by catalase and potentiated by a H2O2-generating system. Formation of the NO . catalase complex was evident by ESR spectroscopy in test solutions containing NaN3 or nh2oh, catalase, and a glucose-glucose oxidase, H2O2-generating system. The presence of NO . catalase correlated well with the ability of test solutions to activate purified guanylate cyclase. These results provide evidence for catalase-dependent NO generation from NaN3 and NH2OH under conditions leading to guanylate cyclase activation. Preformed NO . hemoglobin or NO . cytochrome P-420 also activated heme-deficient partially purified guanylate cyclase. The ability of several preformed NO . heme protein complexes, but not NO, to stimulate heme-deficient guanylate cyclase supports the concept that formation of the paramagnetic nitrosyl . heme complex, mediated by either enzymatic or nonenzymatic reactions, is a common and essential step in the process by which NO or NO-forming compounds activate guanylate cyclase. In the absence of the NO ligand, both hemoglobin and catalase suppress the stimulatory effects of the corresponding NO . heme proteins on guanylate cyclase. Release of each heme protein from the NO . heme protein complex occurs more rapidly under aerobic compared to anaerobic conditions. However, hemoglobin is approximately 2000 times more effective as an inhibitor of NO . hemoglobin stimulation of guanylate cyclase than is catalase as an inhibitor of NO . catalase action. This finding may explain the more pronounced decline in the rate of cGMP generation in air in the presence of NO . hemoglobin compared to NO . catalase. The results imply that guanylate cyclase responses to activators that can form NO are determined by both the stimulatory activity of the endogenous heme acceptors of NO and the relative inhibitory effects of the unliganded heme proteins present.  相似文献   

8.
Nitric oxide (NO) signaling in mammals controls important processes such as smooth muscle relaxation and neurotransmission by the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). NO binding to the heme domain of sGC leads to dissociation of the iron–histidine (Fe–His) bond, which is required for enzyme activity. The heme domain of sGC belongs to a larger class of proteins called H‐NOX (Heme‐Nitric oxide/OXygen) binding domains. Previous crystallographic studies on H‐NOX domains demonstrate a correlation between heme bending and protein conformation. It was unclear, however, whether these structural changes were important for signal transduction. Subsequent NMR solution structures of H‐NOX proteins show a conformational change upon disconnection of the heme and proximal helix, similar to those observed in the crystallographic studies. The atomic details of these conformational changes, however, are lacking in the NMR structures especially at the heme pocket. Here, a high‐resolution crystal structure of an H‐NOX mutant mimicking a broken Fe–His bond is reported. This mutant exhibits specific changes in heme conformation and major N‐terminal displacements relative to the wild‐type H‐NOX protein. Fe–His ligation is ubiquitous in all H‐NOX domains, and therefore, the heme and protein conformational changes observed in this study are likely to occur throughout the H‐NOX family when NO binding leads to rupture of the Fe–His bond.  相似文献   

9.
Maes EM  Roberts SA  Weichsel A  Montfort WR 《Biochemistry》2005,44(38):12690-12699
Nitrophorin 4 (NP4), a nitric oxide (NO)-transport protein from the blood-sucking insect Rhodnius prolixus, uses a ferric (Fe3+) heme to deliver NO to its victims. NO binding to NP4 induces a large conformational change and complete desolvation of the distal pocket. The heme is markedly nonplanar, displaying a ruffling distortion postulated to contribute to stabilization of the ferric iron. Here, we report the ferrous (Fe2+) complexes of NP4 with NO, CO, and H2O formed after chemical reduction of the protein and the characterization of these complexes by absorption spectroscopy, flash photolysis, and ultrahigh-resolution crystallography (resolutions vary from 0.9 to 1.08 A). The absorption spectra, both in solution and in the crystal, are typical for six-coordinated ferrous complexes. Closure and desolvation of the distal pocket occurs upon binding CO or NO to the iron regardless of the heme oxidation state, confirming that the conformational change is driven by distal ligand polarity. The degree of heme ruffling is coupled to the nature of the ligand and the iron oxidation state in the following order: (Fe3+)-NO > (Fe2+)-NO > (Fe2+)-CO > (Fe3+)-H2O > (Fe2+)-H2O. The ferrous coordination geometry is as expected, except for the proximal histidine bond, which is shorter than typically found in model compounds. These data are consistent with heme ruffling and coordination geometry serving to stabilize the ferric state of the nitrophorins, a requirement for their physiological function. Possible roles for heme distortion and NO bending in heme protein function are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Ligand binding to the heme distal side is a paradigm of heme-protein biochemistry, the proximal axial ligand being in most cases a His residue. NO binds to the ferrous heme-Fe-atom giving rise to hexa-coordinated adducts (as in myoglobin and hemoglobin) with His and NO as proximal and distal axial ligands, respectively, or to penta-coordinated adducts (as in soluble guanylate cyclase) with NO as the axial distal ligand. Recently, the ferrous derivative of Alcaligenes xylosoxidans cytochrome c' (Axcyt c') and of cardiolipin-bound horse heart cytochrome c (CL-hhcyt c) have been reported to bind NO to the "dark side" of the heme (i.e., as the proximal axial ligand) replacing the endogenous ligand His. Conversely, CL-free hhcyt c behaves as ferrous myoglobin by binding NO to the heme distal side, keeping His as the proximal axial ligand. Moreover, the ferrous derivative of CL-hhcyt c binds CO at the heme distal side, the proximal axial ligand being His. Furthermore, CL-hhcyt c shows peroxidase activity. In contrast, CL-free hhcyt c does not bind CO and does not show peroxidase activity. This suggests that heme-proteins may utilize both sides of the heme for ligand discrimination, which appears to be modulated allosterically. Here, structural and functional aspects of NO binding to ferrous Axcyt c' and (CL-)hhcyt c are reviewed.  相似文献   

12.
The chaperone heat shock protein 90 (hsp90) associates with signaling proteins in cells including soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). hsp90 associates with the heme-free (apo) sGC-β1 subunit and helps to drive heme insertion during maturation of sGC to its NO-responsive active form. Here, we found that NO caused apo-sGC-β1 to rapidly and transiently dissociate from hsp90 and associate with sGC-α1 in cells. This NO response (i) required that hsp90 be active and that cellular heme be available and be capable of inserting into apo-sGC-β1; (ii) was associated with an increase in sGC-β1 heme content; (iii) could be mimicked by the heme-independent sGC activator BAY 60-2770; and (iv) was followed by desensitization of sGC toward NO, sGC-α1 disassociation, and reassociation with hsp90. Thus, NO promoted a rapid, transient, and hsp90-dependent heme insertion into the apo-sGC-β1 subpopulation in cells, which enabled it to combine with the sGC-α1 subunit to form the mature enzyme. The driving mechanism likely involves conformational changes near the heme site in sGC-β1 that can be mimicked by the pharmacologic sGC activator. Such dynamic interplay between hsp90, apo-sGC-β1, and sGC-α1 in response to NO is unprecedented and represent new steps by which cells can modulate the heme content and activity of sGC for signaling cascades.  相似文献   

13.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a heterodimeric, nitric oxide (NO)-sensing hemoprotein composed of two subunits, alpha1 and beta1. NO binds to the heme cofactor in the beta1 subunit, forming a five-coordinate NO complex that activates the enzyme several hundred-fold. In this paper, the heme domain has been localized to the N-terminal 194 residues of the beta1 subunit. This fragment represents the smallest construct of the beta1 subunit that retains the ligand-binding characteristics of the native enzyme, namely, tight affinity for NO and no observable binding of O(2). A functional heme domain from the rat beta2 subunit has been localized to the first 217 amino acids beta2(1-217). These proteins are approximately 40% identical to the rat beta1 heme domain and form five-coordinate, low-spin NO complexes and six-coordinate, low-spin CO complexes. Similar to sGC, these constructs have a weak Fe-His stretch [208 and 207 cm(-)(1) for beta1(1-194) and beta2(1-217), respectively]. beta2(1-217) forms a CO complex that is very similar to sGC and has a high nu(CO) stretching frequency at 1994 cm(-)(1). The autoxidation rate of beta1(1-194) was 0.073/min, while the beta2(1-217) was substantially more stable in the ferrous form with an autoxidation rate of 0.003/min at 37 degrees C. This paper has identified and characterized the minimum functional ligand-binding heme domain derived from sGC, providing key details toward a comprehensive characterization.  相似文献   

14.
Bovine lung soluble guanylate cyclase was purified to apparent homogeneity in a form that was deficient in heme. Heme-deficient guanylate cyclase was rapidly and easily reconstituted with heme by reacting enzyme with hematin in the presence of excess dithiothreitol, followed by removal of unbound heme by gel filtration. Bound heme was verified spectrally and NO shifted the absorbance maximum in a manner characteristic of other hemoproteins. Heme-deficient and heme-reconstituted guanylate cyclase were compared with enzyme that had completely retained heme during purification. NO and S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine only marginally activated heme-deficient guanylate cyclase but markedly activated both heme-reconstituted and heme-containg forms of the enzyme. Restoration of marked activation of heme-deficient guanylate cyclase was accomplished by including 1 μM hematin in enzyme reaction mixtures containing dithiothreitol. Preformed NO-heme activated all forms of guanylate cyclase in the absence of additional heme. Guanylate cyclase activation was observed in the presence of either MgGTP or MnGTP, although the magnitude of enzyme activation was consistently greater with MgGTP. The apparent Km for GTP in the presence of excess Mn2+ or Mg2+ was 10 μM and 85–120 μM, respectively, for unactivated guanylate cyclase. The apparent Km for GTP in the presence of Mn2+ was not altered but the Km in the presence of Mg2+ was lowered to 58 μM with activated enzyme. Maximal velocities were increased by enzyme activators in the presence of either Mg2+ or Mn2+. The data reported in this study indicate that purified guanylate cyclase binds heme and the latter is required for enzyme activation by NO nitroso compounds.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism of activation of soluble guanylate cyclase purified from bovine lung by phenylhydrazine is reported. Heme-deficient and heme-containing forms of guanylate cyclase were studied. Heme-deficient enzyme was activated 10-fold by NO but was not activated by phenylhydrazine. Catalase or methemoglobin enabled phenylhydrazine to activate guanylate cyclase 10-fold and enhanced activation by NO to over 100-fold. Heme-containing enzyme was activated only 3-fold by phenylhydrazine but over 100-fold by NO. Added hemoproteins enhanced enzyme activation by phenylhydrazine to 12-fold without enhancing activation by NO. Reducing or anaerobic conditions inhibited, whereas oxidants enhanced enzyme activation by phenylhydrazine plus catalase, and KCN had no effect. In contrast, enzyme activation by NO and NaN3 was inhibited by oxidants or KCN. NaN3 required native catalase, whereas phenylhydrazine also utilized heat-denatured catalase for enzyme activation. Thus, the mechanism of guanylate cyclase activation by phenylhydrazine differed from that by NO or NaN3. Guanylate cyclase activation by phenylhydrazine resulted from an O2-dependent reaction between phenylhydrazine and hemoproteins to generate stable iron-phenyl hemoprotein complexes. These complexes activated guanylate cyclase in the absence of O2, but lost activity after acidification, basification, or heating. Gel filtration of prereacted mixtures of [U-14C]phenylhydrazine plus hemoproteins resulted in co-chromatography of radioactivity, protein, and guanylate cyclase stimulating activity, and yielded a phenyl-hemoprotein binding stoichiometry of four under specified conditions (one phenyl/heme). [14C]Phenyl bound to heme-containing but not heme-deficient guanylate cyclase and binding correlated with enzyme activation. Moreover, reactions between enzyme and iron-[14C] phenyl hemoprotein complexes resulted in the exchange or transfer of iron-phenyl heme to guanylate cyclase and this correlated with enzyme activation.  相似文献   

16.
Bovine lung soluble guanylate cyclase was purified to apparent homogeneity in a form that was deficient in heme. Heme-deficient guanylate cyclase was rapidly and easily reconstituted with heme by reacting enzyme with hematin in the presence of excess dithiothreitol, followed by removal of unbound heme by gel filtration. Bound heme was verified spectrally and NO shifted the absorbance maximum in a manner characteristic of other hemoproteins. Heme-deficient and heme-reconstituted guanylate cyclase were compared with enzyme that had completely retained heme during purification. NO and S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine only marginally activated heme-deficient guanylate cyclase but markedly activated both heme-reconstituted and heme-containing forms of the enzyme. Restoration of marked activation of heme-deficient guanylate cyclase was accomplished by including 1 microM hematin in enzyme reaction mixtures containing dithiothreitol. Preformed NO-heme activated all forms of guanylate cyclase in the absence of additional heme. Guanylate cyclase activation was observed in the presence of either MgGTP or MnGTP, although the magnitude of enzyme activation was consistently greater with MgGTP. The apparent Km for GTP in the presence of excess Mn2+ or Mg2+ was 10 microM and 85-120 microM, respectively, for unactivated guanylate cyclase. The apparent Km for GTP in the presence of Mn2+ was not altered but the Km in the presence of Mg2+ was lowered to 58 microM with activated enzyme. Maximal velocities were increased by enzyme activators in the presence of either Mg2+ or Mn2+. The data reported in this study indicate that purified guanylate cyclase binds heme and the latter is required for enzyme activation by NO and nitroso compounds.  相似文献   

17.
He C  Neya S  Knipp M 《Biochemistry》2011,50(40):8559-8575
The factors leading to the breakage of the proximal iron-histidine bond in the ferroheme protein soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) are still a matter of debate. This event is a key mechanism in the sensing of NO that leads to the production of the second-messenger molecule cGMP. Surprisingly, in the heme protein nitrophorin 7 (NP7), we noticed by UV-vis absorbance spectroscopy and resonance Raman spectroscopy that heme reduction leads to a loss of the proximal histidine coordination, which is not observed for the other isoproteins (NP1-4). Structural considerations led to the generation and spectroscopic investigation of site-directed mutants NP7(E27V), NP7(E27Q), NP4(D70A), and NP2(V24E). Spectroscopic investigation of these proteins shows that the spatial arrangement of residues Glu27, Phe43, and His60 in the proximal heme pocket of NP7 is the reason for the weakened Fe(II)-His60 bond through steric demand. Spectroscopic investigation of the sample of NP7 reconstituted with 2,4-dimethyldeuterohemin ("symmetric heme") demonstrated that the heme vinyl substituents are also responsible. Whereas the breaking of the iron-histidine bond is rarely seen among unliganded ferroheme proteins, the breakage of the Fe(II)-His bond upon binding of NO to the sixth coordination site is sometimes observed because of the negative trans effect of NO. However, it is still rare among the heme proteins, which is in contrast to the case for trans liganded nitrosyl model hemes. Thus, the question of which factors determine the Fe(II)-His bond labilization in proteins arises. Surprisingly, mutant NP2(V24E) turned out to be particularly similar in behavior to sGC; i.e., the Fe(II)-His bond is sensitive to breakage upon NO binding, whereas the unliganded form binds the proximal His at neutral pH. To the best of our knowledge, NP2(V24E) is the first example in which the ability to use the His-on ? His-off switch was engineered into a heme protein by site-directed mutagenesis other than the proximal His itself. Steric tension is, therefore, introduced as a potential structural determinant for proximal Fe(II)-His bond breakage in heme proteins.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanism by which arachidonic acid activates soluble guanylate cyclase purified from bovine lung is partially elucidated. Unlike enzyme activation by nitric oxide (NO), which required the presence of enzyme-bound heme, enzyme activation by arachidonic acid was inhibited by heme. Human but not bovine serum albumin in the presence of NaF abolished activation of heme-containing guanylate cyclase by NO and nitroso compounds, whereas enzyme activation by arachidonic acid was markedly enhanced. Addition of heme to enzyme reaction mixtures restored enzyme activation by NO but inhibited enzyme activation by arachidonic acid. Whereas heme-containing guanylate cyclase was activated only 4- to 5-fold by arachidonic or linoleic acid, both heme-deficient and albumin-treated heme-containing enzymes were activated over 20-fold. Spectrophotometric analysis showed that human serum albumin promoted the reversible dissociation of heme from guanylate cyclase. Arachidonic acid appeared to bind to the hydrophobic heme-binding site on guanylate cyclase but the mechanism of enzyme activation was dissimilar to that for NO or protoporphyrin IX. Enzyme activation by arachidonic acid was insensitive to Methylene blue or KCN, was inhibited competitively by metalloporphyrins, and was abolished by lipoxygenase. Whereas NO and protoporphyrin IX lowered the apparent Km and Ki for MgGTP and uncomplexed Mg2+, arachidonic and linoleic acids failed to alter these kinetic parameters. Thus, human serum albumin can promote the reversible dissociation of heme from soluble guanylate cyclase and thereby abolish enzyme activation by NO but markedly enhance activation by polyunsaturated fatty acids. Arachidonic acid activates soluble guanylate cyclase by heme-independent mechanisms that are dissimilar to the mechanism of enzyme activation caused by protoporphyrin IX.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The binding of NO to the iron heme in guanylate cyclase and other heme proteins induces the cleavage of the proximal histidine bonded to the metal. In this study we assess by means of density functional theory (DFT) electronic structure calculations the role of H-bonding to histidine in the modulation of this effect. We have considered in the first place a model of the isolated active site coordinated with imidazole and imidazolate to mimic the effects of a very strong H-bond. We have also investigated four selected ferrous heme proteins with different proximal histidine environments: the O(2) sensing FixL, horseradish peroxidase C, and the alpha and beta subunits of human hemoglobin. Our results indicate that polarization and charge transfer effects associated with H-bonding to the proximal histidine play a fundamental role in the modulation of the NO trans effect in heme proteins. We also find computational evidence suggesting that protein structural constraints may affect significantly the cleavage of the Fe-His bond.  相似文献   

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