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1.
Carbon monoxide bound to myoglobin and cytochrome c oxidase in separated adult rat heart myocytes has been observed with Fourier transform IR spectroscopy at low temperatures. CO complexes of these two proteins can be spectrally separated through temperature manipulation of the relaxation of the photolyzed systems. Photolyzed carboxymyoglobin relaxes very rapidly above 80 K, whereas the CO photolyzed from cytochrome a3 associates with CuB and relaxes very slowly below 140 K. Cytochrome c oxidase is found to be present in two major molecular forms which we designate alpha and beta. Each form contains an a3Fe and its associated CuB which we observe by their CO complexes. The predominant FeCO band, the alpha form of cytochrome oxidase, is similar to that previously seen in beef heart mitochondria, but with a slightly larger activation enthalpy, delta H = 46 kJ/mol. At least one of the beta forms is similar, but two have not been observed in beef heart mitochondria. Upon photolysis of alpha-FeCO, the alpha-CuCO species is formed. This band splits into two at low temperature. Up to half of the FeCO band area of the intact myocytes is distributed among three or more minor species (beta forms). The beta-FeCO bands all appear to be associated with only one beta-CuCO band which does not split at low temperature. After photo-dissociation of CO, the beta forms relax considerably faster than the alpha form, achieving 50% recombination in 10% of the time required for the alpha form. In a tissue slice from an opossum heart exposed to CO, we observed alpha and beta forms of cytochrome oxidase very similar to those in the rat heart myocytes. The cause of the differences between the alpha and beta forms of the enzyme is unknown, but their possible role in the control of respiration is discussed. Carboxymyoglobin contained within intact rat heart myocytes was very similar to sperm whale carboxymyoglobin, but with a much smaller amount of the lower frequency minor component.  相似文献   

2.
S Park  L P Pan  S I Chan    J O Alben 《Biophysical journal》1996,71(2):1036-1047
Purified cytochrome c oxidase CO complex from beef heart has been studied by Fourier transform infrared absorbance difference spectroscopy. Photolysis at 10-20 Kelvin results in dissociation of a3FeCO, formation of CuBCO, and perturbation of the a3-heme and CuB complex. The vibrational perturbation spectrum between 900 and 1700 cm-1 contains a wealth of information about the binuclear center. Appearance in infrared photoperturbation difference spectra of virtually all bands previously reported from resonance Raman spectra indicate the importance of polarization along the 4-vinyl:8-formyl axis, which results in the reduction of heme symmetry to C2v. Frequency-shifted bands due to the 8-formyl and 4-vinyl groups of the a3-heme have been identified and quantitated. The frequency shifts have been interpreted as being due to a change in porphyrin polarization with change in spin state of the iron by photodissociation of CO or perturbation of the CuB coordination complex.  相似文献   

3.
The rebinding of CO to cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans in the fully reduced and in the half-reduced (mixed valence) form as a function of temperature was investigated using time-resolved rapid-scan FT-IR spectroscopy in the mid-IR (1200-2100 cm-1). For the fully reduced enzyme, rebinding was complete in approximately 2 s at 268 K and showed a biphasic reaction. At 84 K, nonreversible transfer of CO from heme a3 to CuB was observed. Both photolysis at 84 K and photolysis at 268 K result in FT-IR difference spectra which show similarities in the amide I, amide II, and heme modes. Both processes, however, differ in spectral features characteristic for amino acid side chain modes and may thus be indicative for the motional constraint of CO at low temperature. Rebinding of photodissociated CO for the mixed-valence enzyme at 268 K is also biphasic, but much slower as compared to the fully reduced enzyme. FT-IR difference spectra show band features similar to those for the fully reduced enzyme. Additional strong bands in the amide I and amide II range indicate local conformational changes induced by electron and coupled proton transfer. These signals disappear when the temperature is lowered to 84 K. At 268 K, a difference signal at 1746 cm-1 is observed which is shifted by 6 cm-1 to 1740 cm-1 in 2H2O. The absence of this signal for the mutant Glu 278 Gln allows assignment to the COOH stretching mode of Glu 278, and indicates changes of the conformation, proton position, or protonation of this residue upon electron transfer.  相似文献   

4.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra are reported for CO-bound cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP). At low pH, two forms are observed: form II, with nu Fe-C = 530 cm-1 and delta FeCO = 585 cm-1, and form I, with nu Fe-C = 495 cm-1 and no detectable delta FeCO. They appear to have coincident nu CO infrared bands, at 1922 cm-1. These low-pH forms, similar to those observed for horseradish peroxidase (HRP), are attributed to tilted, H-bonded CO and perpendicular CO, respectively. The frequencies differ between the two proteins, a weaker H bond to CO being indicated for CCP. As with HRP, the equilibrium between forms I and II is shifted toward the latter at increasing CO concentrations, suggesting that secondary binding of CO perturbs the distal residues. At high pH [8.4, tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane buffer] the form II fraction converts to another form, II', with nu FeC = 503 cm-1, delta FeCO = 575 cm-1, and nu CO = 1948 cm-1; a tilted, non-H-bonded geometry is suggested. If phosphate buffer is used, however, form II (H bonded) persists at pH 8.4. This result establishes a role for phosphate in stabilizing the H-bonded form of the enzyme; it is suggested that phosphate binds near the distal imidazole and substantially increases its pKa. The conformational state is also influenced by aging. Fresh protein contains purely high spin FeIII heme, as monitored by the high-frequency RR spectrum, and yields form II almost exclusively at elevated CO concentrations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy and infrared spectroscopy have been used to characterize the three vibrational modes, CO and FeC stretching and FeCO bending, for carbon monoxide bound to reduced horseradish peroxidase, with the aid of 13CO and C18O isotope shifts. At high pH, one species, I, is observed, with nu FeC = 490 cm-1 and nu CO = 1932 cm-1. The absence of a band attributable to delta FeCO suggests a linear FeCO unit normal to the heme plane. The data were consistent with I having a strongly H-bonded proximal histidine, as shown by a comparison with imidazole and imidazolate adducts of FeIIPPDME(CO) (PPDME = protoporphyrin IX dimethyl ester), with nu FeC = 497 and 492 cm-1 and nu CO = 1960 and 1942 cm-1. At low pH an additional species, II, is observed, with nu FeC = 537 cm-1, nu CO = 1904 cm-1, and delta FeCO = 587 cm-1; it is attributed to FeCO that is H bonded to a protonated distal histidine, the H bond strongly lowering nu CO and raising nu FeC. The appearance of delta FeCO in the RR spectrum suggests that the FeCO unit in II is tilted with respect to the heme plane. At low pH, the population of I and II depends on the CO concentration. I dominates at low CO/protein levels but is replaced by II as the amount of CO is increased. This behavior is suggested to arise from secondary binding of CO, which induces a conformation change involving the distal residues of the heme pocket.  相似文献   

6.
Ground state near-infrared absorption spectra of fully reduced unliganded and fully reduced CO (a2+ CuA+ a3(2+)-CO CuB+) cytochrome c oxidase were investigated. Flash-photolysis time-resolved absorption difference spectra of the mixed-valence (a3+ CuA2+ a3(2+)-CO CuB+) and the fully reduced CO complexes were also studied. A band near 785 nm (epsilon approximately 50 M-1cm-1) was observed in the fully reduced unliganded enzyme and the CO photoproducts. The time-resolved 785 nm band disappeared on the same timescale (t1/2 approximately 7 ms) as CO recombined with cytochrome a3(2+). This band, which is attributed to the unliganded five coordinate ferrous cytochrome a3(2+), has some characteristics of band III in deoxy-hemoglobin and deoxy-myoglobin. A second band was observed at approximately 710 nm (epsilon approximately 80 M-1cm-1) in the fully reduced unliganded and the fully reduced CO complexes. This band, which we assign to the low spin ferrous cytochrome a, appears to be affected by the ligation state at the cytochrome a3(2+) site.  相似文献   

7.
The active site of the oxygen-avid truncated hemoglobin from Bacillus subtilis has been characterized by infrared absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopies, and the dynamics of CO rebinding after photolysis has been investigated by picosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Resonance Raman experiments on the CO bound adduct revealed the presence of two Fe-CO stretching bands at 545 and 520 cm-1, respectively. Accordingly, two C-O stretching bands at 1924 and 1888 cm-1 were observed in infrared absorption and resonance Raman measurements. The very low C-O stretching frequency at 1888 cm-1 (corresponding to the extremely high RR stretching frequency at 545 cm-1) indicates unusually strong hydrogen bonding between CO and distal residues. On the basis of a comparison with other truncated hemoglobin it is envisaged that the two CO conformers are determined by specific interactions with the TrpG8 and TyrB10 residues. Mutation of TrpG8 to Leu deeply alters the hydrogen-bonding network giving rise mainly to a CO conformer characterized by a Fe-CO stretching band at 489 cm-1 and a CO stretching band at 1958 cm-1. Picosecond laser photolysis experiments carried out on the CO bound adduct revealed dynamical processes that take place within a few nanoseconds after photolysis. Picosecond dynamics is largely dominated by CO geminate rebinding and is consistent with strong H-bonding contributions of TyrB10 and TrpG8 to ligand stabilization.  相似文献   

8.
F G Fiamingo  D W Jung  J O Alben 《Biochemistry》1990,29(19):4627-4633
Ethanol has been observed to cause a perturbation of the catalytic center of the major respiratory protein cytochrome c oxidase. These effects were examined by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of carbon monoxide complexes of cytochrome a3Fe and of CuB formed by low-temperature photodissociation of the a3FeCO complex. Carbon monoxide binds to reduced cytochrome oxidase in two major structural forms, alpha and beta, both of which are altered by ethanol. In the absence of ethanol, 15-22% of the total cytochrome oxidase in beef heart mitochondria was observed as beta-forms. Ethanol addition caused a concentration-dependent elimination of the beta-forms with 40% disappearing at 0.05 M (0.23%) ethanol, a concentration that can readily be achieved in the blood of intoxicated individuals. At 0.5 M (2.3%) ethanol and above, almost no beta-forms were detectable. The alpha-CuBCO absorption normally splits into two bands at temperatures below 40 K. This effect was decreased in the presence of ethanol and eliminated by high ethanol concentrations. It appears that ethanol increases the structural fluctuations at the active site of the enzyme, analogous to the effects of increased temperature. There was an 8-10% decrease in the maximum rate of oxygen reduction by mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase in 0.05 M ethanol at 24 degrees C, while higher concentrations of ethanol caused no further inhibition. This is the first demonstration that alpha- and beta-forms of cytochrome c oxidase can be modified by an externally added reagent. Changes in the spectra of alpha-CuBCO in the presence of 50% (v/v) ethylene glycol were quite striking, but variable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The rebinding kinetics of CO to myoglobin after flash photolysis is nonexponential in time below approximately 180 K; the kinetics is governed by a distribution of enthalpic barriers. This distribution results from inhomogeneities in the protein conformation, referred to as conformational substates. Hole-burning experiments on the Soret and IR CO-stretch bands test the assumption that an inhomogeneous distribution of conformational substates results in inhomogeneously broadened spectra. CO was slowly photolyzed at different wavelengths in the Soret band at 10 K. Both the Soret band and the CO-stretch band A1, centered at 1,945 cm-1, shift during photolysis, demonstrating that different wavelengths excite different parts of the distributed population. We have also done kinetic hole-burning experiments by measuring peak shifts in the Soret and A1 bands as the CO molecules rebind. The shifts indicate that the spectral and enthalpic distributions are correlated. In the A1 band, the spectral and enthalpic distributions are highly correlated while in the Soret the correlation is weak. From the peak shifts in the spectral and kinetic hole-burning experiments the inhomogeneous broadening is estimated to be approximately 15% of the total width in the Soret band and approximately 60% in A1. We have previously measured the tilt angle alpha between the bound CO and the heme normal (Ormos, P., D. Braunstein, H. Frauenfelder, M. K. Hong, S.-L. Lin, T. B. Sauke, and R. D. Young. 1988. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 85:8492-8496) and observed a wave number dependence of the tilt angles within the CO-stretch A bands. Thus the spectral and enthalpic distributions of the A bands are coupled to a heterogeneity of the structure.  相似文献   

10.
The photochemical reaction process of bacteriorhodopsin in the nanosecond time range (-120-860 ns) was measured in the 1400-900 cm-1 region with an improved time resolved dispersive-type infrared spectrometer. The system is equipped with a newly developed detection unit whose instrumental response to a 5-ns laser pulse has a full width of the half-maximum of 60 ns. It provides highly accurate data that enabled us to extract a kinetic process one order of magnitude faster than the instrumental response. The spectral changes in the 1400-900 cm-1 region were analyzed by singular value decomposition and resolved into three components. These components were separated by fitting with 10- and 1000-ns exponential functions and a step function, which were convoluted with the instrumental response function. The components with decay time constants of 10 and 1000 ns are named K and KL, respectively, on the basis of previous visible spectroscopy. The spectral shapes of K and KL are distinguishable by their hydrogen-out-of-plane (HOOP) modes, at 958 and 984 cm-1, respectively. The former corresponds to the K intermediate recorded at 77 K and the latter to a K-like photoproduct at 135 K. On the basis of published data, these bands are assigned to the 15-HOOP mode, indicating that the K and KL differ in a twist around the C14-C15 bond.  相似文献   

11.
Vibrational frequencies associated with FeC and CO stretching and FeCO bending modes have been determined via resonance Raman (RR) and infrared (IR) spectroscopy for cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) mutants prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. These include the bacterial "wild type", CCP(MI), and mutations involving groups on the proximal (Asp-235----Asn; Trp-191---Phe) and distal (Trp-51----Phe; Arg-48----Leu and Lys) side of the heme. The data were analyzed with the aid of a recently established correlation between nu FeC and nu CO, which can be used to distinguish between back-bonding and axial ligand donor effects. At high pH all adducts showed essentially the same vibrational pattern (form I') with nu FeC approximately 505 cm-1, nu CO approximately 1948 cm-1, and delta FeCO (weak RR band) approximately 576 cm-1. These frequencies are very similar to those shown by the myoglobin CO adduct and imply a "normal" H-bond of the proximal histidine. At pH 7 (pH 6 for Asn-235 and Leu-48), different forms are seen for different proteins: form I (nu FeC approximately 500 cm-1, nu CO = 1922-1941 cm-1, and delta FeCO approximately 580 cm-1, very weak) in the case of CCP(MI) and Phe-191, as well as bakers' yeast CCP, or form II (nu FeC approximately 530 cm-1, nu CO = 1922-1933 cm-1, and delta FeCO = 585 cm-1, moderately strong) for Asn-235 and Phe-51.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Neuroglobin (Ngb) is a small globular protein that binds diatomic ligands like oxygen, carbon monoxide (CO) and nitric oxide at a heme prosthetic group. We have performed FTIR spectroscopy in the infrared stretching bands of CO and flash photolysis with monitoring in the electronic heme absorption bands to investigate structural heterogeneity at the active site of Ngb and its effects on CO binding and migration at cryogenic temperatures. Four CO stretching bands were identified; they correspond to discrete conformations that differ in structural details and CO binding properties. Based on a comparison of bound-state and photoproduct IR spectra of the wild-type protein, Ngb distal pocket mutants and myoglobin, we have provided structural interpretations of the conformations associated with the different CO bands. We have also studied ligand migration to the primary docking site, B. Rebinding from this site is governed by very low enthalpy barriers (∼1 kJ/mol), indicating an extremely reactive heme iron. Moreover, we have observed ligand migration to a secondary docking site, C, from which CO rebinding involves higher enthalpy barriers.  相似文献   

13.
The C-O stretching frequencies of fully reduced carbonmonoxy cytochrome ba3, a newly discovered terminal oxidase of the bacterium Thermus thermophilus (Zimmermann, B.H., Nitsche, C.I., Fee, J.A., Rusnak, F., and Münck, E. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S. A. 85, 5779-5783), are studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Multiple C-O frequencies are observed in the Fourier transform infrared spectra, indicating the presence of discrete interconverting conformers of the enzyme. Upon photolysis, the CO is shown to migrate exclusively to CuB+. Above 200 K, the CO returns to the heme a3 by a thermal process which follows simple first-order kinetics. The rate of the reaction was studied from 205 to 230 K and at 300 K, yielding the activation parameters delta H = 14.9 kcal/mol and delta S = -5 cal/mol/K. These are compared with previously determined activation parameters for CO recombination in mitochondrial cytochrome aa3 preparations (Fiamingo, F.G., Altschuld, R.A., Moh, P.P., and Alben, J.O. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 1639-1650). We report the novel finding that CO remains bound to CuB+ at room temperature during continuous photolysis of cytochrome ba3, and we conjecture on the possible interference of copper-bound CO in "flow-flash" and "triple-trap" studies of cytochrome c oxidases.  相似文献   

14.
When partially reduced cytochrome c oxidase samples are reoxidized with dioxygen, an EPR-silent dioxygen intermediate, which is at the three-electron level of dioxygen reduction, is trapped at the dioxygen reduction site. The intermediate has novel spectral features at 580 and 537 nm. Combined optical and EPR results reveal that this intermediate reacts rapidly with CO at 277-298 K causing the abolition of the 580/537 mm features and the appearance of a rhombic CuB EPR signal. A ferryl Fea3, or an intermediate at the same formal level of oxidation, is proposed to oxidize CO to CO2 producing an EPR-detectable CuB adjacent to a low-spin ferrous Fea3-dioxygen (or carbon monoxide) adduct.  相似文献   

15.
Infrared spectroscopy of a single cell--the human erythrocyte   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Methods for obtaining the infrared spectrum of a single erythrocyte by infrared microscopy have been developed. The spectrum contains the amide I, II, and III bands characteristic of protein secondary structure near 1650, 1550, and 1300 cm-1, respectively. Bound carbon monoxide exhibits a readily measured band at 1951 cm-1 for 12C16O and 1907 cm-1 for 13C16O. Both amide and CO bands are similar to those found for purified hemoglobin A. Spectra can be obtained in H2O or D2O media under physiologically relevant conditions. Single cell infrared spectroscopy (SCIR) permits the qualitative and quantitative determination of differences among individual red cells. These results suggest many potential applications for SCIR for the measurements of properties of individual cells at the molecular level under physiologically relevant conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Infrared spectroscopy has been used to examine the oxidized and CO-inhibited forms of Fe-only hydrogenase I from Clostridium pasteurianum. For the oxidized enzyme, five bands are detected in the infrared spectral region between 2100 and 1800 cm(-1). The pattern of infrared bands is consistent with the presence of two terminally coordinated carbon monoxide molecules, two terminally coordinated cyanide molecules, and one bridging carbon monoxide molecule, ligated to the Fe atoms of the active site [2Fe] subcluster. Infrared spectra of the carbon monoxide-inhibited state, prepared using both natural abundance CO and 13CO, indicate that the two terminally coordinated CO ligands that are intrinsic to the enzyme are coordinated to different Fe atoms of the active site [2Fe] subcluster. Irradiation of the CO-inhibited state at cryogenic temperatures gives rise to two species with dramatically different infrared spectra. The first species has an infrared spectrum identical to the spectrum of the oxidized enzyme, and can be assigned as arising from the photolysis of the exogenous CO from the active site. This species, which has been observed in X-ray crystallographic measurements [Lemon, B. J., and Peters, J. W. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 3793], decays above 150 K. The second light-induced species decays above 80 K and is characterized by loss of the infrared band associated with the Fe bridging CO at 1809 cm(-1). Potential models for the second photolysis event are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetic properties of the three taxonomic A substates of sperm whale carbonmonoxy myoglobin in 75% glycerol/buffer are studied by flash photolysis with monitoring in the infrared stretch bands of bound CO at nu(A0) approximately 1967 cm-1, nu(A1) approximately 1947 cm-1, and nu(A3) approximately 1929 cm-1 between 60 and 300 K. Below 160 K the photodissociated CO rebinds from the heme pocket, no interconversion among the A substates is observed, and rebinding in each A substate is nonexponential in time and described by a different temperature-independent distribution of enthalpy barriers with a different preexponential. Measurements in the electronic bands, e.g., the Soret, contain contributions of all three A substates and can, therefore, be only approximately modeled with a single enthalpy distribution and a single preexponential. The bond formation step at the heme is fastest for the A0 substate, intermediate for the A1 substate, and slowest for A3. Rebinding between 200 and 300 K displays several processes, including geminate rebinding, rebinding after ligand escape to the solvent, and interconversion among the A substates. Different kinetics are measured in each of the A bands for times shorter than the characteristic time of fluctuations among the A substates. At longer times, fluctuational averaging yields the same kinetics in all three A substates. The interconversion rates between A1 and A3 are determined from the time when the scaled kinetic traces of the two substates merge. Fluctuations between A1 and A3 are much faster than those between A0 and either A1 or A3, so A1 and A3 appear as one kinetic species in the exchange with A0. The maximum-entropy method is used to extract the distribution of rate coefficients for the interconversion process A0 <--> A1 + A3 from the flash photolysis data. The temperature dependencies of the A substate interconversion processes are fitted with a non-Arrhenius expression similar to that used to describe relaxation processes in glasses. At 300 K the interconversion time for A0 <--> A1 + A3 is 10 microseconds, and extrapolation yields approximately 1 ns for A1 <--> A3. The pronounced kinetic differences imply different structural rearrangements. Crystallographic data support this conclusion: They show that formation of the A0 substate involves a major change of the protein structure; the distal histidine rotates about the C(alpha)-C(beta) bond, and its imidazole sidechain swings out of the heme pocket into the solvent, whereas it remains in the heme pocket in the A1 <--> A3 interconversion. The fast A1 <--> A3 exchange is inconsistent with structural models that involve differences in the protonation between A1 and A3.  相似文献   

18.
To determine the magnitude and direction of the internal electric field in the Xe4 cavity of myoglobin mutant L29W-S108L, we have studied the vibrational Stark effect of carbon monoxide (CO) using infrared spectroscopy at cryogenic temperatures. CO was photodissociated from the heme iron and deposited selectively in Xe4. Its infrared spectrum exhibits Stark splitting into two bands associated with CO in opposite orientations. Two different photoproduct states can be distinguished, C' and C', with markedly different properties. For C', characteristic temperature-dependent changes of the area, shift, and width were analyzed, based on a dynamic model in which the CO performs fast librations within a double-well model potential. For the barrier between the wells, a height of approximately 1.8 kJ/mol was obtained, in which the CO performs oscillations at an angular frequency of approximately 25 cm(-1). The magnitude of the electric field in the C' conformation was determined as 11.1 MV/cm; it is tilted by an angle of 29 degrees to the symmetry axis of the potential. Above 140 K, a protein relaxation leads to a significantly altered photoproduct, C', with a smaller Stark splitting and a more confining potential (barrier >4 kJ/mol) governing the CO librations.  相似文献   

19.
The ubiquinol oxidase cytochrome bo3 from Escherichia coli is one of the respiratory heme-copper oxidases which catalyze the reduction of O2 to water linked to translocation of protons across the bacterial or mitochondrial membrane. We have studied the structure of the CuB site in the binuclear heme-copper center of O2 reduction by EXAFS spectroscopy in the fully reduced state of this enzyme, as well as in the reduced CO-liganded states where CO is bound either to the heme iron or to CuB. We find that, in the reduced enzyme, CuB is coordinated by one weakly bound and two strongly bound histidine imidazoles at Cu-N distances of 2.10 and 1.92 A, respectively, and that an additional feature at 2.54 A is due to a highly ordered water molecule that might be weakly associated with the copper. Unexpectedly, the binding of CO to heme iron is found to result in a major conformational change at CuB, which now binds only two equidistant histidine imidazoles at 1.95 A and a chloride ion at 2. 25 A, with elimination of the water molecule and one of the histidines. Attempts to remove the chloride from the enzyme by extensive dialysis did not change this finding, nor did substitution of chloride with bromide. Photolysis of CO bound to the heme iron is known to cause the CO to bind to CuB in a very fast reaction and to remain bound to CuB at low temperatures. In this state, we indeed find the CO to be bound to CuB at a Cu-C distance of 1.85 A, with chloride still bound at 2.25 A and the two histidine imidazoles at a Cu-N distance of 2.01 A. These results suggest that reduction of the binuclear site weakens the bond between CuB and one of its three histidine imidazole ligands, and that binding of CO to the reduced binuclear site causes a major structural change in CuB in which one histidine ligand is lost and replaced by a chloride ion. Whether chloride is a cofactor in this enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Carbon monoxide is a useful vibrational probe of heme binding sites in proteins, because FeCO backbonding is modulated by polar interactions with protein residues, and by variations in the donor strength of the trans ligand. This modulation is sensitively monitored by the CO and FeC stretching frequencies, which are readily detectable in infrared and resonance Raman spectra. The two frequencies are anticorrelated, and the nuFeC/nuCO position along the correlation line reflects the type and strength of distal polar interactions. Changes in the trans ligand donor strength shift the correlation to higher or lower positions. Illustrative applications of the nuFeC/nuCO diagram are reviewed for proteins bearing histidine and thiolate axial ligands. Steric crowding has not been found to affect the nuFeC/nuCO correlations significantly, except in the special case of cytochrome oxidase, where the heme-bound CO may interact with the nearby CuB center.  相似文献   

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