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1.
Femtosecond coherence spectroscopy is used to probe low frequency (20-400 cm−1) modes of the ferrous heme group in solution, with and without 2-methyl imidazole (2MeIm) as an axial ligand. The results are compared to heme proteins (CPO, P450cam, HRP, Mb) where insertion of the heme into the protein results in redistribution of the low frequency spectral density and in (∼60%) longer damping times for the coherent signals. The major effect of imidazole ligation to the ferrous heme is the “softening” of the low frequency force constants by a factor of ∼0.6 ± 0.1. The functional consequences of imidazole ligation are assessed and it is found that the enthalpic CO rebinding barrier is increased significantly when imidazole is bound. The force constant softening analysis, combined with the kinetics results, indicates that the iron is displaced by only ∼0.2 Å from the heme plane in the absence of the imidazole ligand, whereas it is displaced by ∼0.4 Å when imidazole (histidine) is present. This suggests that binding of imidazole (histidine) as an axial ligand, and the concomitant softening of the force constants, leads to an anharmonic distortion of the heme group that has significant functional consequences.  相似文献   

2.
Effective concentrations of amino acid side chains in an unfolded protein.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
K Muthukrishnan  B T Nall 《Biochemistry》1991,30(19):4706-4710
Preferential interactions between chain segments are studied in unfolded cytochrome c. The method takes advantage of heme ligation in the unfolded protein, a feature unique to proteins with covalently attached heme. The approach allows estimation of the effective concentration of one polypeptide chain segment relative to another, and is successful in detecting differences for peptide chain segments separated by different numbers of residues in the linear sequence. The method uses proton NMR spectroscopy to monitor displacement of the histidine heme ligands by imidazole as guanidine hydrochloride unfolded cytochrome c is titrated with deuterated imidazole. When the imidazole concentration exceeds the effective (local) concentration of histidine ligands, the protein ligands are displaced by deuterated imidazole. On displacement, the histidine ring proton resonances move from the paramagnetic region of the spectrum to the diamagnetic region. Titrations have been carried out for members of the mitochondrial cytochrome c family that contain different numbers of histidine residues. These include cytochromes c from tuna (2), yeast iso-2 (3), and yeast iso-1-MS (4). At high imidazole concentration, the number of proton resonances that appear in the histidine ring C2H region of the NMR spectrum is one less than the number of histidine residues in the protein. So one histidine, probably His-18, remains as a heme ligand. The effective local concentrations of histidines-26, -33, and -39 relative to the heme (position 14-17) are estimated to be (3-16) X 10(-3) M.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
To evaluate the potential of using heme-containing lipocalin nitrophorin 1 (NP1) as a template for protein engineering, we have replaced the native axial heme-coordinating histidine residue with glycine, alanine, and cysteine. We report here the characterization of the cysteine mutant H60C_NP1 by spectroscopic and crystallographic methods. The UV/vis, resonance Raman, and magnetic circular dichroism spectra suggest weak thiolate coordination of the ferric heme in the H60C_NP1 mutant. Reduction to the ferrous state resulted in loss of cysteine coordination, while addition of exogenous imidazole ligands gave coordination changes that varied with the ligand. Depending on the substitution of the imidazole, we could distinguish three heme coordination states: five-coordinate monoimidazole, six-coordinate bisimidazole, and six-coordinate imidazole/thiolate. Ligand binding affinities were measured and found to be generally 2–3 orders of magnitude lower for the H60C mutant relative to NP1. Two crystal structures of the H60C_NP1 in complex with imidazole and histamine were solved to 1.7- and 1.96-Å resolution, respectively. Both structures show that the H60C mutation is well tolerated by the protein scaffold and suggest that heme–thiolate coordination in H60C_NP1 requires some movement of the heme within its binding cavity. This adjustment may be responsible for the ease with which the engineered heme–thiolate coordination can be displaced by exogenous ligands.  相似文献   

4.
The oxygenase domains of nitric oxide synthases are unusual in that they contain at least three ligand binding sites; these correspond to the axial heme ligand position, the substrate binding site, and the pterin binding site. Ligands can occupy portions of a site or extend into regions of adjacent sites. Depending on the size, shape, and binding mode of ligands to these positions, cooperative and anticooperative interactions mediated conformationally and by binding domain overlap can be observed. In the present study we describe competition between arginine and imidazole at the axial heme ligand position; a second imidazole, which occupies part of the arginine site in some crystal structures, is too weak to contribute to the equilibria. All spectroscopic titrations using imidazole competition depend on displacement of the heme axial imidazole ligand, which drives the ferriheme low spin. Aminoguanidine, a partial arginine analog, has multiple binding modes. It is somewhat competitive with arginine; a ternary complex forms, but the K(d) for arginine increases from 1 to 15 microM in the presence of saturating aminoguanidine. Aminoguanidine competition with imidazole is very weak, amounting to approximately a factor of two increase in K(d). This implies that aminoguanidine has multiple binding modes and is not well described as an arginine analog. The major binding mode occupies part of the binding site but does not extend into the imidazole axial ligand binding domain and probably corresponds to the crystal structure. The other binding mode is not significantly overlapped with the arginine site.  相似文献   

5.
A histidine auxotroph of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been used to metabolically incorporate [1,3-15N2] histidine into yeast cytochrome c oxidase. Electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy of cytochrome a in the [15N]histidine-substituted enzyme reveals an ENDOR signal which can be assigned to hyperfine coupling of a histidine 15N with the low-spin heme, thereby unambiguously identifying histidine as an axial ligand to this cytochrome. Comparison of this result with similar ENDOR data obtained on two 15N-substituted bisimidazole model compounds, metmyoglobin-[15N]imidazole and bis[15N]imidazole tetraphenyl porphyrin, provides strong evidence for bisimidazole coordination in cytochrome a.  相似文献   

6.
7.
S D Zari?  D M Popovi?  E W Knapp 《Biochemistry》2001,40(26):7914-7928
Factors determining conformations of imidazole axially coordinated to heme in heme proteins were investigated by analyzing 693 hemes in 432 different crystal structures of heme proteins from the Protein Data Bank (PDB), where at least one histidine is ligated to heme. The results from a search of the PDB for protein structures were interpreted with molecular force field computations. Analysis of data from these crystal structures indicated that there are two main factors that determine the orientations of imidazole ligated to heme. These are the interactions of imidazole with the propionic acid side chains of heme and with the histidine backbone. From the analysis of the crystal structures of heme proteins, it turned out that the hydrogen bonding pattern is often not decisive, though it is probably used by nature to fine-tune the orientation of imidazole axially ligated to heme. We found that in many heme proteins the NdeltaH group of imidazole ligated to heme can assume a number of different hydrogen bonds and that in mutant structures the orientation of the ligated imidazole often does not change significantly, although the mutant altered the hydrogen bonding scheme involving the imidazole. Data from crystal structures of heme proteins show that there are preferred orientations of imidazoles with respect to heme. Generally, the NdeltaH group of imidazole is oriented toward the propionic acid groups of the heme. In some cases, the NdeltaH group of imidazole is close to only one of the propionic acid groups, but it is practically never oriented in the opposite direction. The imidazole also adopts a preferred orientation with respect to its histidine backbone such that the plane of the imidazole ring is practically never parallel to the Calpha-Cbeta bond of its histidine backbone. For a given conformation of histidine backbone with respect to heme, as well as imidazole with respect to histidine backbone, the orientation of the imidazole with respect to heme is uniquely determined, since the three orientations depend on each other. Hence, the interaction of the imidazole with the backbone also influences the orientation of the imidazole with respect to the heme. Force field computations are in agreement with experimental data. With this method, we showed that there is an energy minimum when the NdeltaH group of the imidazole is oriented toward the propionic acid groups and that there are minima of energy for orientations where the imidazole ring is orthogonal to the plane defined by the Calpha-Cbeta and Cbeta-Cgamma bonds of the histidine. The computations also demonstrated that these interactions are mainly of electrostatic origin. By taking into account these two major factors, we were able to understand the orientations of axially coordinated imidazoles for all groups of heme proteins, except for the group of cytochrome c peroxidase. In this group, the orientation of the imidazole is determined by a strong hydrogen bond of the NdeltaH group with Asp235.  相似文献   

8.
Prostaglandin endoperoxide (PGH) synthase has a single iron protoporphyrin IX which is required for both the cyclooxygenase and peroxidase activities of the enzyme. At room temperature, the heme iron is coordinated at the axial position by an imidazole, and about 20% of the heme iron is coordinated at the distal position by an imidazole. We have used site-directed mutagenesis to investigate which histidine residues are involved in PGH synthase catalysis and heme binding. Individual mutant cDNAs for ovine PGH synthases were prepared with amino acid substitutions at each of 13 conserved histidines. cos-1 cells were transfected with each of these cDNAs, and the cyclooxygenase and peroxidase activities of the resulting microsomal PGH synthases were measured. Mutant PGH synthases in which His-207, His-309, or His-388 was replaced with either glutamine or alanine lacked both activities. Gln-386 and Ala-386 PGH synthase mutants exhibited cyclooxygenase but not peroxidase activities. Other mutants exhibited both activities at varying levels. Because binding of heme renders native PGh synthase resistant to cleavage by trypsin, we examined the effects of heme on the relative sensitivities of native, Ala-204, Ala-207, Ala-309, Ala-386, and Ala-388 mutant PGH synthases to trypsin as a measure of the heme-protein interaction. The Ala-309 PGh synthase mutant was notably hypersensitive to tryptic cleavage, even in the presence of exogenous heme; in contrast, the native enzyme and the other alanine mutants exhibited similar, lower sensitivities toward trypsin and, except for the Ala-386 mutant, were partially protected from trypsin cleavage by heme. Preincubation of the native and each of the alanine mutant PGH synthases, including the Ala-309 mutant, with indomethacin protected the proteins from trypsin cleavage. Thus, all the mutant proteins retain sufficient three-dimensional structure to bind cyclooxygenase inhibitors. Our results suggest that His-309 is one of the heme ligands, probably the axial ligand, of PGH synthase. Two other histidines, His-207 and His-388, are essential for both PGH synthase activities suggesting that either His-207 or His-388 can serve as the distal heme ligand; however, the trypsin cleavage measurements imply that neither His-207 nor His-388 is required for heme binding. This is consistent with the fact that only 20% of the distal coordination position of the heme iron of PGH synthase is occupied by an imidazole side chain.  相似文献   

9.
Replacement of the axial histidine ligand with exogenous imidazole has been accomplished in a number of heme protein mutants, where it often serves to complement the functional properties of the protein. In this paper, we describe the effects of pH and buffer ion on the crystal structure of the H175G mutant of cytochrome c peroxidase, in which the histidine tether between the heme and the protein backbone is replaced by bound imidazole. The structures show that imidazole can occupy the proximal H175G cavity under a number of experimental conditions, but that the details of the interaction with the protein and the coordination to the heme are markedly dependent on conditions. Replacement of the tethered histidine ligand with imidazole permits the heme to shift slightly in its pocket, allowing it to adopt either a planar or distally domed conformation. H175G crystallized from both high phosphate and imidazole concentrations exists as a novel, 5-coordinate phosphate bound state, in which the proximal imidazole is dissociated and the distal phosphate is coordinated to the iron. To accommodate this bound phosphate, the side chains of His-52 and Asn-82 alter their positions and a significant conformational change in the surrounding protein backbone occurs. In the absence of phosphate, imidazole binds to the proximal H175G cavity in a pH-dependent fashion. At pH 7, imidazole is directly coordinated to the heme (d(Fe--Im) = 2.0 A) with a nearby distal water (d(Fe--HOH) = 2.4 A). This is similar to the structure of WT CCP except that the iron lies closer in the heme plane, and the hydrogen bond between imidazole and Asp-235 (d(Im--Asp) = 3.1 A) is longer than for WT CCP (d(His--Asp) = 2.9 A). As the pH is dropped to 5, imidazole dissociates from the heme (d(Fe--Im) = 2.9 A), but remains in the proximal cavity where it is strongly hydrogen bonded to Asp-235 (d(Im--Asp) = 2.8 A). In addition, the heme is significantly domed toward the distal pocket where it may coordinate a water molecule. Finally, the structure of H175G/Im, pH 6, at low temperature (100 K) is very similar to that at room temperature, except that the water above the distal heme face is not present. This study concludes that steric restrictions imposed by the covalently tethered histidine restrain the heme and its ligand coordination from distortions that would arise in the absence of the restricted tether. Coupled with the functional and spectroscopic properties described in the following paper in this issue, these structures help to illustrate how the delicate and critical interactions between protein, ligand, and metal modulate the function of heme enzymes.  相似文献   

10.
J J Rux  J H Dawson 《FEBS letters》1991,290(1-2):49-51
Horse heart cytochrome c with either histidine or cysteine replacing the endogenous axial methionine ligand at position 80 has been characterized with magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy in the UV-visible region. Comparison of the MCD spectra of the mutant proteins in the ferric state to those of authentic bis-imidazole- and imidazole/thiolate-ligated ferric heme proteins clearly shows that the histidine-imidazole and cysteine-thiolate groups of the replacement amino acids at position 80 are coordinated to the heme iron in the mutant proteins. This study demonstrates the power of MCD spectroscopy in identifying axial ligands in mutant heme proteins. Accurate axial ligand assignment is essential for proper interpretation of the altered properties of such novel proteins.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Although imidazole ligand binding to cytochrome c is not directly related to its physiological function, it has the potential to provide valuable information on the molecular and electronic structure of the protein. The solution structure of the imidazole adduct of oxidized horse heart cytochrome c (Im-cyt c) has been determined through 2D NMR spectroscopy. The Im-cyt c, 8 mM in 1.2 M imidazole solution at pH 5.7 and 313 K, provided altogether 2,542 NOEs (1,901 meaningful NOEs) and 194 pseudocontact shifts. The 35 conformers of the family show the RMSD values to the average structure of 0.063+/-0.007 nm for the backbone and 0.107+/-0.007 nm for all heavy atoms, respectively. The characterization of Im-cyt c is discussed in detail both in terms of structure and electronic properties. The replacement of the axial ligand Met80 with the exogenous imidazole ligand induces significant conformation changes in both backbone and side chains of the residues located in the distal axial ligand regions. The imidazole ligand binds essentially parallel to the imidazole of the proximal histidine, the two planes forming an angle of 8+/-7 degrees. The electron delocalization on the heme moiety and the magnetic susceptibility tensor are consistent with these structural features.  相似文献   

13.
Roach MP  Ozaki S  Watanabe Y 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1446-1454
A general inability to elucidate extensive variations in the electronic characteristics of proximal heme iron ligands in heme proteins has hampered efforts to obtain a clear understanding of the role of the proximal heme iron ligand in the activation of oxygen and peroxide. The disadvantage of the frequently applied site-directed mutagenesis technique is that it is limited by the range of natural ligands available within the genetic code. The myoglobin cavity mutant H93G [Barrick, D. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 6546-6554] has its proximal histidine ligand replaced with glycine, a mutation which leaves an open cavity capable of accommodating a variety of unnatural potential proximal ligands. We have carried out investigations of the effect of changing the electron donor characteristics of a variety of substituted imidazole proximal ligands on the rate of formation of myoglobin compound II and identified a correlation between the substituted imidazole N-3 pK(a) (which provides a measure of the electron donor ability of N-3) and the apparent rate of formation of compound II. A similar rate dependence correlation is not observed upon binding of azide. This finding indicates that O-O bond cleavage and not the preceding peroxide binding step is being influenced by the electron donor characteristics of the substituted imidazole ligands. The proximal ligand effects are clearly visible, but their overall magnitude is quite low (1.7-fold increase in the O-O bond cleavage rate per pK(a) unit). This appears to provide support for recent commentaries which concluded that the partial ionization of the proximal histidine ligand in typical heme peroxidases may not be enough of an influence to provide a mechanistically critical push effect [Poulos, T. L. (1996) JBIC, J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 1, 356-359]. Further attempts were made to define the mechanism of the influence of N-3 pK(a) on O-O bond cleavage by using peracetic acid and cumene hydroperoxide as mechanistic probes. The observation of heme destruction in these reactions indicates that displacement of the proximal imidazole ligands by peracetic acid or cumene hydroperoxide has occurred. A combination mutation (H64D/H93G) was prepared with the objective of observing compound I of H64D/H93G with substituted imidazoles as proximal ligands upon reaction with H(2)O(2). This double mutant was found to simultaneously bind imidazole to both axial positions, an arrangement which prevents a reaction with H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome c5 from Pseudomonas mendocina has been isolated and the coordination geometry at the heme iron was investigated by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Individual assignments were obtained for heme c and the axial ligands. From studies of nuclear Overhauser enhancements the axial histidine imidazole ring orientation relative to the heme group was found to coincide with that of other c-type cytochromes. In contrast, a new structure was observed for the axial methionine. This includes S chirality at the iron-bound sulfur atom, but compared to cytochromes c-551 from Pseudomonads and Rhodopseudomonas gelatinosa, which also contain S-chiral methionine, the spatial arrangement of the gamma- and beta-methylene groups and the alpha carbon of methionine is markedly different. Analysis of the electron spin density distribution in ferricytochrome c5 in the light of this new coordination geometry provides additional support for the hypothesis that the electronic structure of heme c is primarily governed by the orientation of the sp3 lone-pair orbital of the axial sulfur atom with respect to the heme plane.  相似文献   

15.
The (1)H NMR resonances of the heme substituents of the low-spin Fe(III) form of nitrophorin 2, as its complexes with N-methylimidazole (NP2-NMeIm) and imidazole (NP2-ImH), have been assigned by a combination of (1)H homonuclear two-dimensional NMR techniques and (1)H-(13)C HMQC. Complete assignment of the proton and partial assignment of the (13)C resonances of the heme of these complexes has been achieved. Due to favorable rates of ligand exchange, it was also possible to assign part of the (1)H resonances of the high-spin heme via saturation transfer between high- and low-spin protein forms in a partially liganded NP2-NMeIm sample; additional resonances (vinyl and propionate) were assigned by NOESY techniques. The order of heme methyl resonances in the high-spin form of the protein over the temperature range of 10-37 degrees C is 8 = 5 > 1 > 3; the NMeIm complex has 5 > 1 > 3 > 8 as the order of heme methyl resonances at <30 degrees C, while above that temperature, the order is 5 > 3 > 1 > 8, due to crossover of the closely spaced 3- and 1-methyl resonances of the low-spin complex at higher temperatures. This crossover defines the nodal plane of the heme orbital used for spin delocalization as being oriented 162 +/- 2 degrees clockwise from the heme N(II)-Fe-N(IV) axis for the heme in the B orientation. For the NP2-ImH complex, the order of heme methyl resonances is 3 > 5 > 1 > 8, which defines the orientation of the nodal plane of the heme orbital used for spin delocalization as being oriented approximately 150-155 degrees clockwise from the heme N(II)-Fe-N(IV) axis. In both low-spin complexes, the results are most consistent with the exogenous planar ligand controlling the orientation of the nodal plane of the heme orbital. In the high-spin form of NP2, the proximal histidine plane is shown to be oriented 135 degrees clockwise from the heme N(II)-Fe-N(IV) axis, again for the B heme orientation. A correlation between the order of heme methyl resonances in the high-spin form of NP2 and several other ferriheme proteins and an apparent 90 degrees shift in the nodal plane of the orbital involved in spin delocalization from that expected on the basis of the orientation of the axial histidine imidazole nodal plane have been explained in terms of bonding interactions between Fe(III), the axial histidine imidazole nitrogen, and the porphyrin pi orbitals of the high-spin protein.  相似文献   

16.
The heme-regulated eukaryotic initiation factor-2alpha (eIF2alpha) kinase (HRI) regulates the initiation of protein synthesis in reticulocytes. The binding of NO to the N-terminal heme-binding domain (NTD) of HRI positively modulates its kinase activity. By utilizing UV-visible absorption, resonance Raman, EPR and CD spectroscopies, two histidine residues have been identified that are crucial for the binding of heme to the NTD. The UV-visible absorption and resonance Raman spectra of all the histidine to alanine mutants constructed were similar to those of the unmutated NTD. However, the change in the CD spectra of the NTD construct containing mutation of His78 to Ala (H78A) indicated loss of the specific binding of heme. The EPR spectrum for the ferric H78A mutant was also substantially perturbed. Thus, His78 is one of the axial ligands for the NTD of HRI. Significant changes in the EPR spectrum of the H123A mutant were also observed, and heme readily dissociated from both the H123A and the H78A NTD mutants, suggesting that His123 was also an axial heme ligand. However, the CD spectrum for the Soret region of the H123A mutant indicated that this mutant still bound heme specifically. Thus, while both His78 and His123 are crucial for stable heme binding, the effects of their mutations on the structure of the NTD differed. His78 appears to play the primary role in the specific binding of heme to the NTD, acting analogously to the "proximal histidine" ligand of globins, while His123 appears to act as the "distal" heme ligand.  相似文献   

17.
Rabbit histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG) binds low-spin heme and metals tightly at several sites that contain histidine. As part of an on-going effort to define and locate the binding sites for these and the other ligands of HRG, the sequence: NH2-Gly-His-Phe-Pro-Phe-His-Trp-... was found in a 16 kDa heme-binding peptide isolated from HRG. The spacing of the histidyl residues in this peptide, which contains the C-terminal 79 residues of HRG, together with molecular modeling suggested that this sequence might constitute one heme binding site of HRG by accommodating heme in a bis-histidyl linkage. Three peptides based on this sequence (I, HFPFHW; II, WHFPFH; and III, HFGFHW) were synthesized, and their ability to bind heme and metals examined. All three peptides bind heme as demonstrated by the changes produced in the absorbance of heme when mixed with the peptides. Substituting glycine for proline in the central position or moving the location of the tryptophan did not affect heme binding. The apparent Kd's of the mesoheme/peptide I, II and III complexes are 75 +/- 25 microM, indicative of heme binding approximately 100 times less avid than the mesoheme/HRG complex (Kd ca. 1 microM), but nearly 1000 times tighter than that of the mesoheme/histidine complex (Kd ca. 60 mM). The absorbance spectra of the mesoheme/peptide complexes, the loss of binding caused by modification of histidine residues, and the pH dependence of heme binding, all indicate that heme forms a low spin, bis-histidyl type of complex with these peptides, like that formed with HRG itself. Copper, but not cadmium or nickel, was an effective inhibitor of heme binding by the peptides. The sequence of HRG congruent with the sequence of peptide I is proposed to be one heme- and metal-binding site of rabbit HRG.  相似文献   

18.
The proton signals for the coordinated axial imidazoles in a series of low-spin ferric bis-imidazole complexes with natural porphyrin derivatives have been located and assigned. The methyl signals of several methyl-substituted imidazoles have also been resolved for the mixed ligand complexes of imidazole and cyanide ion. The imidazole spectra for the bis complexes are essentially the same as those reported earlier for synthetic porphyrins, with the hyperfine shifts exhibiting comparable contributions from the dipolar and contact interactions. The contact contribution reflects spin transfer into a vacant imidazole pi orbital. The spectra of both the mono- and bis-imidazole complex concur in predicting that only the 2-H and 5-CH2 signals of an axial histidine are likely to resonate clearly outside the diamagnetic 0 to --10 ppm from TMS region in hemoproteins. However, both the 2-H and 4-H imidazole peaks are found to be too broad to detect in a hemoprotein. Hence, it is suggested that the pair of non-heme, single-proton resonances in low-spin met-myoglobin cyanides arise from the non-equivalent methylene protons at the 5-position of the histidyl imidazole. Both the resonance positions and relative linewidths in the model compounds are consistent with the data for this pair of protons in myoglobins. The possible interpretations of the average downfield bias of these signals as well as the magnitude of their spacing, are discussed in terms of the conformation of the proximal histidine relative to the heme group.  相似文献   

19.
For many pathogenic microorganisms, iron acquisition from host heme sources stimulates growth, multiplication, ultimately enabling successful survival and colonization. In gram‐negative Escherichia coli O157:H7, Shigella dysenteriae and Yersinia enterocolitica the genes encoded within the heme utilization operon enable the effective uptake and utilization of heme as an iron source. While the complement of proteins responsible for heme internalization has been determined in these organisms, the fate of heme once it has reached the cytoplasm has only recently begun to be resolved. Here we report the first crystal structure of ChuX, a member of the conserved heme utilization operon from pathogenic E. coli O157:H7 determined at 2.05 Å resolution. ChuX forms a dimer which remarkably given low sequence homology, displays a very similar fold to the monomer structure of ChuS and HemS, two other heme utilization proteins. Absorption spectral analysis of heme reconstituted ChuX demonstrates that ChuX binds heme in a 1:1 manner implying that each ChuX homodimer has the potential to coordinate two heme molecules in contrast to ChuS and HemS where only one heme molecule is bound. Resonance Raman spectroscopy indicates that the heme of ferric ChuX is composed of a mixture of coordination states: 5‐coordinate and high‐spin, 6‐coordinate and low‐spin, and 6‐coordinate and high‐spin. In contrast, the reduced ferrous form displays mainly a 5‐coordinate and high‐spin state with a minor contribution from a 6‐coordinate and low‐spin state. The νFe‐CO and νC‐O frequencies of ChuX‐bound CO fall on the correlation line expected for histidine‐coordinated hemoproteins indicating that the fifth axial ligand of the ferrous heme is the imidazole ring of a histidine residue. Based on sequence and structural comparisons, we designed a number of site‐directed mutations in ChuX to probe the heme binding sites and dimer interface. Spectral analysis of ChuX and mutants suggests involvement of H65 and H98 in heme coordination as mutations of both residues were required to abolish the formation of the hexacoordination state of heme‐bound ChuX.  相似文献   

20.
To clarify the influence of protein surrounding on the heme reactivity in heme proteins the effect of interaction between a porphyrin ring and pi-acceptor molecule, 1,2,4-trimethyl-pyridinium (TMP), on the affinity of deuteroheme to axial ligands (imidazole and cyanide) has been studied as a model system. It is shown that TMP induces the fourfold decrease in equilibrium constant of imidazole to deuteroheme. From the analysis of the two stages for cyanide binding it is concluded that TMP decreases the binding constant of the first cyanide by 40 times and does not apparently influence the second ligand binding. The effect of TMP on the reactivity of deuteroheme to axial ligands is interpreted as a result of a decrease in the electron density on the iron orbitals which is due to the altered pi-eleectron density in the porphyrin pi-system through the donor-acceptor interaction with TMP molecules. The possible significance of the contacts between the porphyrin and neighboring amino acid residues in determining heme affinity to axial ligands is discussed.  相似文献   

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