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1.
Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase is an 5'-adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl)-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the rearrangement of methylmalonyl-CoA to succinyl-CoA. The crystal structure of this protein revealed that binding of the cofactor is accompanied by a significant conformational change in which dimethylbenzimidazole, the lower axial ligand to cobalt in solution, is replaced by His(610) donated by the active site. The role of the lower axial ligand in the trillion-fold labilization of the upper axial cobalt-carbon bond has been the subject of enduring debate in the model inorganic literature. In this study, we have used a cofactor analog, 5'deoxyadenosylcobinamide GDP (AdoCbi-GDP), which reconstitutes the enzyme in a "histidine-off" form and which allows us to evaluate the contribution of the lower axial ligand to catalysis. The k(cat) for the enzyme in the presence of AdoCbi-GDP is reduced by a factor of 4 compared with the native cofactor AdoCbl. The overall deuterium isotope effect in the presence of AdoCbi-GDP ((D)V = 7.2 +/- 0.8) is comparable with that observed in the presence of AdoCbl (5.0 +/- 0.6) and indicates that the hydrogen transfer steps in this reaction are not significantly affected by the change in coordination state of the bound cofactor. These surprising results are in marked contrast to the effects ascribed to the corresponding lower axial histidine ligands in the cobalamin-dependent enzymes glutamate mutase and methionine synthase.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of the fully oxidized di-heme peroxidase from Nitrosomonas europaea has been solved to a resolution of 1.80 A and compared to the closely related enzyme from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Both enzymes catalyze the peroxide-dependent oxidation of a protein electron donor such as cytochrome c. Electrons enter the enzyme through the high-potential heme followed by electron transfer to the low-potential heme, the site of peroxide activation. Both enzymes form homodimers, each of which folds into two distinct heme domains. Each heme is held in place by thioether bonds between the heme vinyl groups and Cys residues. The high-potential heme in both enzymes has Met and His as axial heme ligands. In the Pseudomonas enzyme, the low-potential heme has two His residues as axial heme ligands [Fulop et al. (1995) Structure 3, 1225-1233]. Since the site of reaction with peroxide is the low-potential heme, then one His ligand must first dissociate. In sharp contrast, the low-potential heme in the Nitrosomonas enzyme already is in the "activated" state with only one His ligand and an open distal axial ligation position available for reaction with peroxide. A comparison between the two enzymes illustrates the range of conformational changes required to activate the Pseudomonas enzyme. This change involves a large motion of a loop containing the dissociable His ligand from the heme pocket to the molecular surface where it forms part of the dimer interface. Since the Nitrosomonas enzyme is in the active state, the structure provides some insights on residues involved in peroxide activation. Most importantly, a Glu residue situated near the peroxide binding site could possibly serve as an acid-base catalytic group required for cleavage of the peroxide O--O bond.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the functional and structural roles of the proximal thiolate ligand in cytochrome P450cam, we prepared the C357H mutant of the enzyme in which the axial cysteine residue (Cys357) was replaced with a histidine residue. We obtained the unstable C357H mutant by developing a new preparation procedure involving in vitro folding of P450cam from the inclusion bodies. The C357H mutant in the ferrous-CO form exhibited the Soret peak at 420 nm and the Fe-CO stretching line at 498 cm-1, indicating a neutral histidine residue as the axial ligand. However, another internal ligand is coordinated to the heme iron as the sixth ligand in the ferric and ferrous forms of the C357H mutant, suggesting the collapse of the substrate-binding site. The C357H mutant showed no catalytic activity for camphor hydroxylation and the reduced heterolytic/homolytic ratio of the O-O bond scission in the reaction with cumene hydroperoxide. The present observations indicate that the thiolate coordination in P450cam is important for the construction of the heme pocket and the heterolysis of the O-O bond.  相似文献   

4.
Oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalyzed by a bio-inspired iron porphyrin bearing a hanging carboxylic acid group over the porphyrin ring, and a tethered axial imidazole ligand was studied by DFT calculations. BP86 free energy calculations of the redox potentials and pK a’s of reaction components involved in the proton coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions of the ferric-hydroxo and -superoxo complexes were performed based on Born–Haber thermodynamic cycle in conjunction with a continuum solvation model. The comparison was made with iron porphyrins that lack either in the hanging acid group or axial ligand, suggesting that H-bond interaction between the carboxylic acid and iron-bound hydroxo, aquo, superoxo, and peroxo ligands (de)stabilizes the Fe–O bonding, resulting in the increase in the reduction potential of the ferric complexes. The axial ligand interaction with the imidazole raises the affinity of the iron-bound superoxo and peroxo ligands for proton. In addition, a low-spin end-on ferric-hydroperoxo intermediate, a key precursor for O–O cleavage, can be stabilized in the presence of axial ligation. Thus, selective and efficient ORR of iron porphyrin can be achieved with the aid of the secondary coordination sphere and axial ligand interactions.  相似文献   

5.
Ojha S  Hwang J  Kabil O  Penner-Hahn JE  Banerjee R 《Biochemistry》2000,39(34):10542-10547
Human cystathionine beta-synthase is one of two key enzymes involved in intracellular metabolism of homocysteine. It catalyzes a beta-replacement reaction in which the thiolate of homocysteine replaces the hydroxyl group of serine to give the product, cystathionine. The enzyme is unusual in its dependence on two cofactors: pyridoxal phosphate and heme. The requirement for pyridoxal phosphate is expected on the basis of the nature of the condensation reaction that is catalyzed; however the function of the heme in this protein is unknown. We have examined the spectroscopic properties of the heme in order to assign the axial ligands provided by the protein. The heme Soret peak of ferric cystathionine beta-synthase is at 428 nm and shifts to approximately 395 nm upon addition of the thiol chelator, mercuric chloride. This is indicative of 6-coordinate low-spin heme converting to a 5-coordinate high-spin heme. The enzyme as isolated exhibits a rhombic EPR signal with g values of 2.5, 2.3, and 1.86, which are similar to those of heme proteins and model complexes with imidazole/thiolate ligands. Mercuric chloride treatment of the enzyme results in conversion of the rhombic EPR signal to a g = 6 signal, consistent with formation of the high-spin ferric heme. The X-ray absorption data reveal that iron in ferric cystathionine beta-synthase is 6-coordinate, with 1 high-Z scatterer and 5 low-Z scatterers. This is consistent with the presence of 5 nitrogens and 1 sulfur ligand. Together, these data support assignment of the axial ligands as cysteinate and imidazole in ferric cystathionine beta-synthase.  相似文献   

6.
Secondary amine mono-oxygenase from Pseudomonas aminovorans catalyzes the NAD(P)H- and dioxygen-dependent N-dealkylation of secondary amines to yield a primary amine and an aldehyde. Heme iron, flavin, and non-heme iron prosthetic groups are known to be present in the oligomeric enzyme. The N-dealkylation reaction is also catalyzed by the only other heme-containing mono-oxygenase, cytochrome P-450. In order to identify the heme iron axial ligands of secondary amine mono-oxygenase so as to better define the structural requirements for oxygen activation by heme enzymes, we have investigated the spectroscopic properties of the enzyme. The application of three different spectroscopic techniques, UV-visible absorption, magnetic circular dichroism and electron paramagnetic resonance, to study eight separate enzyme derivatives has provided extensive and convincing evidence for the presence of a proximal histidine ligand. This conclusion is based primarily on comparisons of the spectral properties of the enzyme with those of parallel derivatives of myoglobin (histidine proximal ligand) and P-450 (cysteinate proximal ligand). Spectral studies of ferric secondary amine mono-oxygenase as a function of pH have led to the proposal that the distal ligand is water. Deprotonation of the distal water ligand occurs upon either raising the pH to 9.0 or substrate (dimethylamine) binding. In contrast, the deoxyferrous enzyme appears to have a weakly bound nitrogen donor distal ligand. Initial spectroscopic studies of the iron-sulfur units in the enzyme are interpreted in terms of a pair of Fe2S2 clusters. Secondary amine mono-oxygenase is unique in its ability to function as cytochrome P-450 in activating molecular oxygen but to do so with a myoglobin-like active site. As such, it provides an important system with which to probe structure-function relations in heme-containing oxygenases.  相似文献   

7.
Ma JK  Mathews FS  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》2007,46(29):8561-8568
Mutation of the axial Met ligand of the type 1 copper site of amicyanin to Ala or Gln yielded M98A amicyanin, which exhibits typical axial type 1 ligation geometry but with a water molecule providing the axial ligand, and M98Q amicyanin, which exhibits significant rhombic distortion of the type 1 site (Carrell, C. J., Ma, J. K., Antholine, W. E., Hosler, J. P., Mathews, F. S., and Davidson, V. L. (2007) Biochemistry 46, 1900-1912). Despite the change of the axial ligand, the M98Q and M98A mutations had little effect on the redox potential of copper. The true electron transfer (ET) reactions from O-quinol methylamine dehydrogenase to oxidized native and mutant amicyanins revealed that the M98A mutation had little effect on kET, but the M98Q mutation reduced kET 45-fold. Thermodynamic analysis of the latter showed that the decrease in kET was due to an increase of 0.4 eV in the reorganization energy (lambda) associated with the ET reaction to M98Q amicyanin. No change in the experimentally determined electronic coupling or ET distance was observed, confirming that the mutation had not altered the rate-determining step for ET and that this was still a true ET reaction. The basis for the increased lambda is not the nature of the atom that provides the axial ligand because each uses an oxygen from Gln in M98Q amicyanin and from water in M98A amicyanin. Comparisons of the distance of the axial copper ligand from the equatorial plane that is formed by the other three copper ligands in isomorphous crystals of native and mutant amicyanins at atomic resolution indicate an increase in distance from 0.20 A in the native to 0.42 A in M98Q amicyanin and a slight decrease in distance for M98A amicyanin. This correlates with the rhombic distortion caused by the M98Q mutation that is clearly evident in the EPR and visible absorption spectra of the protein and suggests that the extent of rhombicity of the type 1 copper site influences the magnitude of lambda.  相似文献   

8.
MauG is a diheme enzyme possessing a five-coordinate high-spin heme with an axial His ligand and a six-coordinate low-spin heme with His-Tyr axial ligation. A Ca(2+) ion is linked to the two hemes via hydrogen bond networks, and the enzyme activity depends on its presence. Removal of Ca(2+) altered the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals of each ferric heme such that the intensity of the high-spin heme was decreased and the low-spin heme was significantly broadened. Addition of Ca(2+) back to the sample restored the original EPR signals and enzyme activity. The molecular basis for this Ca(2+)-dependent behavior was studied by magnetic resonance and M?ssbauer spectroscopy. The results show that in the Ca(2+)-depleted MauG the high-spin heme was converted to a low-spin heme and the original low-spin heme exhibited a change in the relative orientations of its two axial ligands. The properties of these two hemes are each different than those of the heme in native MauG and are now similar to each other. The EPR spectrum of Ca(2+)-free MauG appears to describe one set of low-spin ferric heme signals with a large g(max) and g anisotropy and a greatly altered spin relaxation property. Both EPR and M?ssbauer spectroscopic results show that the two hemes are present as unusual highly rhombic low-spin hemes in Ca(2+)-depleted MauG, with a smaller orientation angle between the two axial ligand planes. These findings provide insight into the correlation of enzyme activity with the orientation of axial heme ligands and describe a role for the calcium ion in maintaining this structural orientation that is required for activity.  相似文献   

9.
J Tan  J A Cowan 《Biochemistry》1991,30(36):8910-8917
A detailed reaction pathway for the six-electron reduction of SO3(2-) to S2- by the assimilatory-type sulfite reductase (SiR) from Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough) has been deduced from experiments with 35S-labeled enzyme and the relative reaction rates of nitrogenous substrates. The ligand bridging the prosthetic [Fe4S4]-siroheme center is apparently exchanged by 35S2- in both oxidized and reduced enzyme. This 35S2- label was retained in the course of SO3(2-) reduction, implicating substrate binding to the nonbridging axial site of the siroheme. A reaction mechanism is proposed in which SO3(2-) binds to Fe2+ through the sulfur atom, followed by a series of two-electron reductive cleavages of S-O bonds. Protonation of oxygen facilitates bond cleavage, giving hydroxide as leaving group. The bridge remains intact throughout the course of the reaction, providing an efficient coupling pathway for electron transfer between the cluster and siroheme.  相似文献   

10.
Met467, the axial ligand to type I Cu in a multicopper oxidase, Myrothecium verrucaria bilirubin oxidase was substituted with a non-coordinating Phe and Leu to transform the spectral and magnetic properties and oxidase activities of the enzyme into those of fungal laccases, but the mutated type I Cu center showed properties characteristic of phytocyanins, blue copper proteins with an axial coordination of Gln, due to compensatory binding of the distal Asn459 as evidenced by a double mutation.  相似文献   

11.
Superoxide reductase is a novel class of non-heme iron proteins that catalyzes the one-electron reduction of O(2)(.) to H(2)O(2), providing an antioxidant defense in some bacteria. Its active site consists of an unusual non-heme Fe(2+) center in a [His(4) Cys(1)] square pyramidal pentacoordination. In this class of enzyme, the cysteine axial ligand has been hypothesized to be an essential feature in the reactivity of the enzyme. Previous Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy studies on the enzyme from Desulfoarculus baarsii revealed that a protonated carboxylate group, proposed to be the side chain of Glu(114), is in interaction with the cysteine ligand. In this work, using pulse radiolysis, Fourier transform infrared, and resonance Raman spectroscopies, we have investigated to what extent the presence of this Glu(114) carboxylic lateral chain affects the strength of the S-Fe bond and the reaction of the iron active site with superoxide. The E114A mutant shows significantly modified pulse radiolysis kinetics for the protonation process of the first reaction intermediate. Resonance Raman spectroscopy demonstrates that the E114A mutation results in both a strengthening of the S-Fe bond and an increase in the extent of freeze-trapping of a Fe-peroxo species after treatment with H(2)O(2) by a specific strengthening of the Fe-O bond. A fine tuning of the strength of the S-Fe bond by the presence of Glu(114) appears to be an essential factor for both the strength of the Fe-O bond and the pK(a) value of the Fe(3+)-peroxo intermediate species to form the reaction product H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

12.
The paramagnetic iron at the active site of highly purified, catalytically active phenylalanine hydroxylase was studied by EPR at 3.6 K and one-dimensional 1H-NMR spectroscopy at 293 K. The EPR-detectable iron of the bovine enzyme was found to be present as a high-spin form (S = 5/2) in different ligand field symmetries depending on medium conditions (buffer ions) and the presence of ligands known to bind at the active site. At 3.6 K and in phosphate buffer, the paramagnetic iron is coordinated in an environment of rhombic symmetry (g = 4.3), whereas Tris buffer favours an environment of axial ligand field symmetry (g = 6.7, 5.3 and 2.0). The latter axial type of signals resembles those observed at g = 7.0, 5.2 and 1.9 for the enzyme in phosphate buffer when L-noradrenaline is added as an active-site ligand (inhibitor). The same proportion of iron that coordinates to L-noradrenaline seems to be reduced by the pterin cofactor and participate in catalysis. Experimental evidence is presented that Tris inhibits the enzyme by interacting with the enzyme-bound ferric iron and decreases its rate of reduction by the tetrahydropterin cofactor. Preincubation with dithiothreitol also inhibits the enzyme activity and prevents the reduction of its catalytically active ferric iron by pterin cofactors as well as binding of catecholamines to the enzyme. 1H-NMR spectroscopy revealed that the substrate (L-phenylalanine) and L-noradrenaline bind close to the paramagnetic iron, and that the catecholamine displaces the substrate from its binding at the active site. The results support our recently proposed model for the cooperative binding of inhibitor and substrate at the active site [Martínez, A. et al. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 193, 211-219].  相似文献   

13.
 A series of oxoiron(IV) porphyrin cation radical complexes was investigated as compound I analogs of cytochrome P-450. Both the spectroscopic features and the reactivities of the complexes in oxygen atom transfer to olefins were examined as a function of only one variable, the axial ligand trans to the oxoiron(IV) bond. The results disclosed two important kinetic steps – electron transfer from olefin to oxoiron(IV) and intramolecular electron transfer from metal to porphyrin radical – which are affected differently by the axial ligands. The large kinetic barrier of the latter step in the reaction of olefins with the perchlorato-bound oxoiron(IV) porphyrin cation radical complex enabled the trapping of a reaction intermediate in which the metal, but not the porphyrin radical, is reduced. The first electron transfer step is probably followed by σ-bond formation, which readily accounts for formation of isomerized organic products at low temperatures. It is finally postulated that part of the enhanced oxygenation activities of cytochrome P-450 monooxygenases and chloroperoxidases is due to a lowering of the energy barrier for the second electron transfer step via participation of their redox-active cysteinate ligand. Received: 16 January 1997 / Accepted: 24 May 1997  相似文献   

14.
The covalent attachment of a 14-carbon aliphatic tail on a glycine residue of nascent translated peptide chains is catalyzed in human cells by two N-myristoyltransferase (NMT) enzymes using the rare myristoyl-CoA (C14-CoA) molecule as fatty acid donor. Although, NMT enzymes can only transfer a myristate group, they lack specificity for C14-CoA and can also bind the far more abundant palmitoyl-CoA (C16-CoA) molecule. We determined that the acyl-CoA binding protein, acyl-CoA binding domain (ACBD)6, stimulated the NMT reaction of NMT2. This stimulatory effect required interaction between ACBD6 and NMT2, and was enhanced by binding of ACBD6 to its ligand, C18:2-CoA. ACBD6 also interacted with the second human NMT enzyme, NMT1. The presence of ACBD6 prevented competition of the NMT reaction by C16-CoA. Mutants of ACBD6 that were either deficient in ligand binding to the N-terminal ACBD or unable to interact with NMT2 did not stimulate activity of NMT2, nor could they protect the enzyme from utilizing the competitor C16-CoA. These results indicate that ACBD6 can locally sequester C16-CoA and prevent its access to the enzyme binding site via interaction with NMT2. Thus, the ligand binding properties of the NMT/ACBD6 complex can explain how the NMT reaction can proceed in the presence of the very abundant competitive substrate, C16-CoA.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated putidaredoxin-induced structural changes in carbonmonoxy P450cam by using NMR spectroscopy. The resonance from the beta-proton of the axial cysteine was upfield shifted by 0.12 ppm upon the putidaredoxin binding, indicating that the axial cysteine approaches to the heme-iron by about 0.1 A. The approach of the axial cysteine to the heme-iron would enhance the electronic donation from the axial thiolate to the heme-iron, resulting in the enhanced heterolysis of the dioxygen bond. In addition to the structural perturbation on the axial ligand, the structural changes in the substrate and ligand binding site were observed. The resonances from the 5-exo- and 9-methyl-protons of d-camphor, which were newly identified in this study, were upfield shifted by 1.28 and 0.20 ppm, respectively, implying that d-camphor moves to the heme-iron by 0.15-0.7 A. Based on the radical rebound mechanism, the approach of d-camphor to the heme-iron could promote the oxygen transfer reaction. On the other hand, the downfield shift of the resonance from the gamma-methyl group of Thr-252 reflects the movement of the side chain away from the heme-iron by approximately 0.25 A. Because Thr-252 regulates the heterolysis of the dioxygen bond, the positional rearrangement of Thr-252 might assist the scission of the dioxygen bond. We, therefore, conclude that putidaredoxin induces the specific heme environmental changes of P450cam, which would facilitate the oxygen activation and the oxygen transfer reaction.  相似文献   

16.
It is known that anionic surface residues play a role in the long-range electrostatic attraction between acetylcholinesterase and cationic ligands. In our current investigation, we show that anionic residues also play an important role in the behavior of the ligand within the active site gorge of acetylcholinesterase. Negatively charged residues near the gorge opening not only attract positively charged ligands from solution to the enzyme, but can also restrict the motion of the ligand once it is inside of the gorge. We use Brownian dynamics techniques to calculate the rate constant kon for wild type and mutant acetylcholinesterase with a positively charged ligand. These calculations are performed by allowing the ligand to diffuse within the active site gorge. This is an extension of previously reported work in which a ligand was allowed to diffuse only to the enzyme surface. By setting the reaction criteria for the ligand closer to the active site, better agreement with experimental data is obtained. Although a number of residues influence the movement of the ligand within the gorge, Asp74 is shown to play a particularly important role in this function. Asp74 traps the ligand within the gorge, and in this way helps to ensure a reaction. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 46: 465–474, 1998  相似文献   

17.
Different metalated porphyrin compounds were studied as model complexes for cytochrome c oxidase. All models contain a tyrosine molecule and a copper binding site. Two of the compounds are bearing an axial pyridine ligand that could possibly coordinate with Fe porphyrins. All complexes were studied using NMR and UV-Vis spectroscopies and it was found that the coordination of the axial ligand is possible only in one of the porphyrins. Moreover, the synthesized catalysts were studied as promising enzyme mimics using a rotating disc electrode in the presence of molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

18.
Reversible reaction catalyzed by trimeric purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) from Cellulomonas sp. with typical and non-typical substrates, including product inhibition patterns of both reaction directions, and interactions of the enzyme with bisubstrate analogue inhibitors, were investigated by the steady-state kinetic methods and fluorimetric titrations. The ligand chromophores exist most probably as neutral species, and not N(1)-H monoanions, in the complex with PNP, as shown by determination of inhibition constants vs. pH. This supports the mechanism in which hydrogen bond interaction of N(1)-H with Glu204 is crucial in the catalytic process. Stoichiometry of ligand binding, with possible exception of hypoxanthine, is three molecules per enzyme trimer. Kinetic experiments show that in principle the Michaelis-Menten model could not properly describe the reaction. However, this model seems to hold for certain experimental conditions. Data presented here are supported by earlier findings obtained by means of fluorimetric titrations and protective effects of ligands on thermal inactivation of the enzyme. All results are consistent with the following mechanism for trimeric PNPs: (i) random binding of substrates, (ii) potent binding and slow release of some reaction products leading to the circumstances that the chemical step is not the slowest one and that rapid-equilibrium assumptions do not hold, (iii) a dual role of phosphate--a substrate and also a reaction modifier.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of dihydrofolate reductase (EC 1.5.1.3) from Escherichia coli with dihydrofolate and folate analogues has been studied by means of binding and spectroscopic experiments. The aim of the investigation was to determine the number and identity of the binary complexes that can form, as well as pKa values for groups on the ligand and enzyme that are involved with complex formation. The results obtained by ultraviolet difference spectroscopy indicate that, when bound to the enzyme, methotrexate and 2,4-diamino-6,7-dimethylpteridine exist in their protonated forms and exhibit pKa values for their N-1 nitrogens of above 10.0. These values are about five pH units higher than those for the compounds in free solution. The binding data suggest that both folate analogues interact with the enzyme to yield a protonated complex which may be formed by reaction of ionized enzyme with protonated ligand and/or protonated enzyme with unprotonated ligand. The protonated complex formed with 2,4-diamino-6,7-dimethylpteridine can undergo further protonation to form a protonated enzyme-protonated ligand complex, while that formed with methotrexate can ionize to give an unprotonated complex. A group on the enzyme with a pKa value of about 6.3 is involved with the interactions. However, the ionization state of this group has little effect on the binding of dihydrofolate to the enzyme. For the formation of an enzyme-dihydrofolate complex it is essential that the N-3/C-4 amide of the pteridine ring of the substrate be in its neutral form. It appears that dihydrofolate is not protonated in the binary complex.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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