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1.
Monomeric hemoglobin from the trematode Paramphistomum epiclitum displays very high oxygen affinity (P(50)<0.001 mm Hg) and an unusual heme distal site containing tyrosyl residues at the B10 and E7 positions. The crystal structure of aquo-met P. epiclitum hemoglobin, solved at 1.17 A resolution via multiwavelength anomalous dispersion techniques (R-factor=0.121), shows that the heme distal site pocket residue TyrB10 is engaged in hydrogen bonding to the iron-bound ligand. By contrast, residue TyrE7 is unexpectedly locked next to the CD globin region, in a conformation unsuitable for heme-bound ligand stabilisation. Such structural organization of the E7 distal residue differs strikingly from that observed in the nematode Ascaris suum hemoglobin (bearing TyrB10 and GlnE7 residues), which also displays very high oxygen affinity. The oxygenation and carbonylation parameters of wild-type P. epiclitum Hb as well as of single- and double-site mutants, with residue substitutions at positions B10, E7 and E11, have been determined and are discussed here in the light of the protein atomic resolution crystal structure.  相似文献   

2.
The group II truncated hemoglobin from Bacillus subtilis has been cloned, expressed, purified, and characterized. B. subtilis truncated hemoglobin is a monomeric protein endowed with an unusually high oxygen affinity (in the nanomolar range) such that the apparent thermodynamic binding constant for O2 exceeds that for CO by 1 order of magnitude. The kinetic basis of the high oxygen affinity resides mainly in the very slow rate of ligand release. The extremely stable ferrous oxygenated adduct is resistant to oxidation, which can be achieved only with oxidant in large excess, e.g. ferricyanide in 50-fold molar excess. The three-dimensional crystal structure of the cyano-Met derivative was determined at 2.15 A resolution. Although the overall fold resembles that of other truncated hemoglobins, the distal heme pocket displays a unique array of hydrophilic side chains in the topological positions that dominate the steric interaction with iron-bound ligands. In fact, the Tyr-B10, Thr-E7, and Gln-E11 oxygens on one side of the heme pocket and the Trp-G8 indole NE1 nitrogen on the other form a novel pattern of the "ligand-inclusive hydrogen bond network" described for mycobacterial HbO. On the proximal side, the histidine residue is in an unstrained conformation, and the iron-His bond is unusually short (1.91 A).  相似文献   

3.
The x-ray crystal structure of Synechocystis hemoglobin has been solved to a resolution of 1.8 A. The conformation of this structure is surprisingly different from that of the previously reported solution structure, probably due in part to a covalent linkage between the heme 2-vinyl and His117 that is present in the crystal structure but not in the structure solved by NMR. Synechocystis hemoglobin is a hexacoordinate hemoglobin in which the heme iron is coordinated by both the proximal and distal histidines. It is also a member of the "truncated hemoglobin" family that is much shorter in primary structure than vertebrate and plant hemoglobins. In contrast to other truncated hemoglobins, the crystal structure of Synechocystis hemoglobin displays no "ligand tunnel" and shows that several important amino acid side chains extrude into the solvent instead of residing inside the heme pocket. The stereochemistry of hexacoordination is compared with other hexacoordinate hemoglobins and cytochromes in an effort to illuminate factors contributing to ligand affinity in hexacoordinate hemoglobins.  相似文献   

4.
Genome of the model dicot flowering plant, Arabidopsis thaliana, a popular tool for understanding molecular biology of plant physiology, encodes all three classes of plant hemoglobins that differ in their sequence, ligand binding and spectral properties. As such these globins are of considerable attention. Crystal structures of few members of plant class I nonsymbiotic hemoglobin have been described earlier. Here we report the crystal structure of Arabidopsis class I hemoglobin (AHb1) to 2.2 ? and compare its key features with the structures of similar nonsymbiotic hemoglobin from other species. Crystal structure of AHb1 is homologous to the related members with similar globin fold and heme pocket architecture. The structure is homodimeric in the asymmetric unit with both distal and proximal histidines coordinating to the heme iron atom. Residues lining the dimeric interface are also conserved in AHb1 with the exception of additional electrostatic interaction between H112 and E113 of each subunit and that involving Y119 through two water molecules. In addition, differences in heme pocket non-covalent interactions, a novel Ser residue at F7 position, Xe binding site variability, internal cavity topology differences, CD loop conformation and stability and other such properties might explain kinetic variability in AHb1. Detailed cavity analysis of AHb1 showed the presence of a novel long tunnel connecting the distal pockets of both the monomers. Presence of such tunnel, along with conformational heterogeneity observed in the two chains, might suggest cooperative ligand binding and support its role in NO scavenging. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Oxygen Binding and Sensing Proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Fluoride complexes of heme proteins are characterized by unique spectroscopic properties, that provide a simple and direct means to monitor the interactions of the distal heme pocket environment with the iron-bound ligand. In particular, a strong correlation has been demonstrated between the wavelength of the iron-porphyrin charge transfer band at 600-620 nm (CT1) and the strength of H-bonding donation from the distal amino acid side chains to the fluoride ion. In parallel, resonance Raman spectra with excitation within either the CT1 band or the charge transfer band at 450-460 nm (CT2) have revealed that the iron-fluoride stretching frequency is directly affected by H-bonding to the fluoride ion. On this basis, globins and peroxidases display distinct spectroscopic features, which are strongly dependent on the capability of their distal residues (i.e. histidine, arginine and tryptophan) to be involved in H-bonding with the ligand. In particular, in peroxidases strong H-bonding corresponds to a low iron-fluoride stretching frequency and to a red-shifted CT1 band. The reverse is observed in myoglobin. Interestingly, a truncated hemoglobin of microbial origin (Thermobifida fusca) investigated in the present work, displays the specific spectroscopic signature of a peroxidase, in agreement with the presence of strong H-bonding residues, i.e., tyrosine and tryptophan, within the distal pocket.  相似文献   

6.
Two-dimensional 1H-NMR methods have been used to assign side-chain resonances for the tryptophan residues and for several amino acids located in the heme pockets of the carbon monoxide complexes of the major monomeric hemoglobins from Glycera dibranchiata. The NMR spectra reveal a high degree of conservation of the heme pocket structure in the different hemoglobins. However some conformational differences are evident and residues at positions B10 and G8 on the distal side of the heme pocket are not conserved. From the present NMR studies it appears that the monomeric G. dibranchiata hemoglobin examined by X-ray crystallography [Padlan, E. A. & Love, W. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 4067-4078] corresponds to HbC. Except that the orientation of the heme in solution is the reverse of that reported in the crystal structure, there is a close correspondence between the heme pocket structure in the crystal and in solution. The proximal histidine coordination geometry is almost identical in the CO complexes of the three monomeric hemoglobins studied. Distal residues are strongly implicated in determining the observed kinetic differences in ligand binding reactions. In particular, steric crowding of the ligand binding site in hemoglobin A is probably a major factor in the slower kinetics of this component.  相似文献   

7.
The O(2)-avid hemoglobin from the parasitic nematode Ascaris suum exhibits one of the slowest known O(2) off rates. Solution (1)H NMR has been used to investigate the electronic and molecular structural properties of the active site for the cyano-met derivative of the recombinant first domain of this protein. Assignment of the heme, axial His, and majority of the residues in contact with the heme reveals a molecular structure that is the same as reported in the A. suum HbO(2) crystal structure (Yang, J., Kloek, A., Goldberg, D. E., and Mathews, F. S. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 92, 4224-4228) with the exception that the heme in solution is rotated by 180 degrees about the alpha,gamma-meso axis relative to that in the crystal. The observed dipolar shifts, together with the crystal coordinates of HbO(2), provide the orientation of the magnetic axes in the molecular framework. The major magnetic axis, which correlates with the Fe-CN vector, is found oriented approximately 30 degrees away from the heme normal and indicates significant steric tilt because of interaction with Tyr(30)(B10). The three side chain labile protons for the distal residues Tyr(30)(B10) and Gln(64)(E7) were identified, and their relaxation, dipolar shifts, and nuclear Overhauser effects to adjacent residues used to place them in the distal pocket. It is shown that these two distal residues exhibit the same orientations ideal for H bonding to the ligand and to each other, as found in the A. suum HbO(2) crystal. It is concluded that the ligated cyanide participates in the same distal H bonding network as ligated O(2). The combination of the strong steric tilt of the bound cyanide and slow ring reorientation of the Tyr(30)(B10) side chain supports a crowded and constrained distal pocket.  相似文献   

8.
Phase-sensitive two-dimensional NMR methods have been used to obtain extensive proton resonance assignments for the carbon monoxide complexes of lupin leghemoglobins I and II and soybean leghemoglobin a. The assigned resonances provide information on the solution conformations of the proteins, particularly in the vicinity of the heme. The structure of the CO complex of lupin leghemoglobin II in solution is compared with the X-ray crystal structure of the cyanide complex by comparison of observed and calculated ring current shifts. The structures are generally very similar but significant differences are observed for the ligand contact residues, Phe30, His63 and Val67, and for the proximal His97 ligand. Certain residues are disordered and adopt two interconverting conformations in lupin leghemoglobin II in solution. The proximal heme pocket structure is closely conserved in the lupin leghemoglobins I and II but small differences in conformation in the distal heme pocket are apparent. Larger conformational differences are observed when comparisons are made with the CO complex of soybean leghemoglobin. Altered protein-heme packing is indicated on the proximal side of the heme and some conformational differences are evident in the distal heme pocket. The small conformational differences between the three leghemoglobins probably contribute to the known differences in their O2 and CO association and dissociation kinetics. The heme pocket conformations of the three leghemoglobins are more closely related to each other than to sperm whale myoglobin. The most notable differences between the leghemoglobins and myoglobin are: (a) reduced steric crowding of the ligand binding site in the leghemoglobins, (b) different orientations of the distal histidine, and (c) small but significant differences in proximal histidine coordination geometry. These changes probably contribute to the large differences in ligand binding kinetics between the leghemoglobins and myoglobin.  相似文献   

9.
The fine structural properties of the distal heme pocket have been probed by infrared spectroscopy of ferrous carbon monoxy human hemoglobin mutants carrying the mutations LeuB10-->Tyr and HisE7-->Gln on the alpha, beta, and both chains, respectively. The stretching frequency of iron-bound carbon monoxide occurs as a single broad band around 1943 cm(-1) in both the alpha and the beta mutated chains. Such a frequency value indicates that no direct hydrogen bonding exists between the bound CO molecule and the TyrB10 phenolic oxygen, at variance with other naturally occurring TyrB10, GlnE7 nonvertebrate hemoglobins. The rates of carbon monoxide release have been determined for the first time by a Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy stopped-flow technique that allowed us to single out the heterogeneity in the kinetics of CO release in the alpha and beta chains for the mutated proteins and for native HbA. The rates of CO release are 15- to 20-fold faster for the mutated alpha or beta chains with respect to the native ones consistent with the lack of distal stabilization on the iron-bound CO molecule. The present results demonstrate that residues in key topological positions (namely E7 and B10) for the distal steric control of the iron-bound ligand are not interchangeable among hemoglobins from different species.  相似文献   

10.
Hemoglobins at high concentration have been isolated long ago from some insect larvae living in hypoxic environments. Conversely, a monomeric hemoglobin has been discovered recently in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster as intracellular protein expressed both in larvae and in the adult fly. Such a finding indicates that the oxygen supply in insects may be more complex than previously thought, relying not only on O2 diffusion through the tubular tracheal system, but also on carrier-mediated transport and storage. We present here the crystal structure of recombinant D. melanogaster hemoglobin at 1.20 A resolution. Spectroscopic data show that the protein displays a hexacoordinated heme, whose axial ligands are the proximal and distal His residues. Such bis-His ligation of the heme has sizable effects on the protein local structure. Three protein matrix cavities, comparable in size but not in topological locations with those of sperm whale myoglobin, are spread through the protein matrix; one of these can host a xenon atom. Additionally, D. melanogaster hemoglobin binds one molecule of 3-(cyclohexylamino)propanesulfonic acid (CAPS) buffer at a surface pocket, next to the EF hinge. Despite the high resolution achieved, no sequence/structure features specifically supporting the heme hexa- to pentacoordination transition required for diatomic ligand binding could be recognized.  相似文献   

11.
Makino M  Sawai H  Shiro Y  Sugimoto H 《Proteins》2011,79(4):1143-1153
Cytoglobin (Cgb) is a vertebrate heme‐containing globin‐protein expressed in a broad range of mammalian tissues. Unlike myoglobin, Cgb displays a hexa‐coordinated (bis‐hystidyl) heme iron atom, having the heme distal His81(E7) residue as the endogenous sixth ligand. In the present study, we crystallized human Cgb in the presence of a reductant Na2S2O4 under a carbon monoxide (CO) atmosphere, and determined the crystal structure at 2.6 Å resolution. The CO ligand occupies the sixth axial position of the heme ferrous iron. Eventually, the imidazole group of His81(E7) is expelled from the sixth position and swings out of the distal heme pocket. The flipping motion of the His81 imidazole group accompanies structural readjustments of some residues (Gln62, Phe63, Gln72, and Ser75) in both the CD‐corner and D‐helix regions of Cgb. On the other hand, no significant structural changes were observed in other Cgb regions, for example, on the proximal side. These structural alterations that occurred as a result of exogenous ligand (CO) binding are clearly different from those observed in other vertebrate hexa‐coordinated globins (mouse neuroglobin, Drosophila melanogaster hemoglobin) and penta‐coordinated sperm whale myoglobin. The present study provides the structural basis for further discussion of the unique ligand‐binding properties of Cgb. Proteins 2011. © 2011 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
J E Knapp  Q H Gibson  L Cushing  W E Royer 《Biochemistry》2001,40(49):14795-14805
Cooperative ligand binding in the dimeric hemoglobin from the blood clam Scapharca inaequivalvis results primarily from tertiary, rather than quaternary, structural changes. Ligand binding is coupled with conformational changes of key residues, including Phe 97, which is extruded from the proximal heme pocket, and the heme group, which moves deeper into the heme pocket. We have tested the role of the heme movement in cooperative function by mutating Ile 114, at the base of the heme pocket. Replacement of this residue with a Met did not disturb the hemoglobin structure or significantly alter equilibrium ligand binding properties. In contrast, substitution with a Phe at position 114 inhibits the ligand-linked movement of the heme group, and substantially reduces oxygen affinity and cooperativity. As the extent of heme movement to the normal position of the ligated state is diminished, Phe 97 is inhibited from its movement into the interface upon ligand binding. These results indicate a tight coupling between these two key cooperative transitions and suggest that the heme movement may be an obligatory trigger for expulsion of Phe 97 from the heme pocket.  相似文献   

13.
Kinetic traces were generated for the nanosecond and slower rebinding of photodissociated CO to trHbN in solution and in porous sol-gel matrices as a function of viscosity, conformation, and mutation. TrHbN is one of the two truncated hemoglobins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The kinetic traces were analyzed in terms of three distinct phases. These three phases are ascribed to rebinding: (i) from the distal heme pocket, (ii) from the adjacent apolar tunnel prior to conformational relaxation, and (iii) from the apolar tunnel subsequent to conformational relaxation. The fractional content of each of these phases was shown to be a function of the viscosity and, in the case of the sol-gel-encapsulated samples, sample preparation history. The observed kinetic patterns support a model consisting of the following elements: (i) the viscosity and conformation-sensitive dynamics of the Tyr(B10) side chain facilitate diffusion of the dissociated ligand from the distal heme pocket into the adjacent tunnel; (ii) the distal heme pocket architecture determines ligand access from the tunnel back to the heme iron; (iii) the distal heme pocket architecture is governed by a ligand-dependent hydrogen bonding network that limits the range of accessible side chain positions; and (iv) the apolar tunnel linking the heme site to the solvent biases the competition between water and ligand for occupancy of the vacated polar distal heme pocket greatly toward the nonpolar ligand. Implications of these finding with respect to biological function are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Crystal structures of the ferric and ferrous heme complexes of HmuO, a 24-kDa heme oxygenase of Corynebacterium diphtheriae, have been refined to 1.4 and 1.5 A resolution, respectively. The HmuO structures show that the heme group is closely sandwiched between the proximal and distal helices. The imidazole group of His-20 is the proximal heme ligand, which closely eclipses the beta- and delta-meso axis of the porphyrin ring. A long range hydrogen bonding network is present, connecting the iron-bound water ligand to the solvent water molecule. This enables proton transfer from the solvent to the catalytic site, where the oxygen activation occurs. In comparison to the ferric complex, the proximal and distal helices move closer to the heme plane in the ferrous complex. Together with the kinked distal helix, this movement leaves only the alpha-meso carbon atom accessible to the iron-bound dioxygen. The heme pocket architecture is responsible for stabilization of the ferric hydroperoxo-active intermediate by preventing premature heterolytic O-O bond cleavage. This allows the enzyme to oxygenate selectively at the alpha-meso carbon in HmuO catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
Knapp JE  Bonham MA  Gibson QH  Nichols JC  Royer WE 《Biochemistry》2005,44(44):14419-14430
Residue F4 (Phe 97) undergoes the most dramatic ligand-linked transition in Scapharca dimeric hemoglobin, with its packing in the heme pocket in the unliganded (T) state suggested to be a primary determinant of its low affinity. Mutation of Phe 97 to Leu (previously reported), Val, and Tyr increases oxygen affinity from 8- to 100-fold over that of the wild type. The crystal structures of F97L and F97V show side chain packing in the heme pocket for both R and T state structures. In contrast, in the highest-affinity mutation, F97Y, the tyrosine side chain remains in the interface (high-affinity conformation) even in the unliganded state. Comparison of these mutations reveals a correlation between side chain packing in the heme pocket and oxygen affinity, indicating that greater mass in the heme pocket lowers oxygen affinity due to impaired movement of the heme iron into the heme plane. The results indicate that a key hydrogen bond, previously hypothesized to have a central role in regulation of oxygen affinity, plays at most only a small role in dictating ligand affinity. Equivalent mutations in sperm whale myoglobin alter ligand affinity by only 5-fold. The dramatically different responses to mutations at the F4 position result from subtle, but functionally critical, stereochemical differences. In myoglobin, an eclipsed orientation of the proximal His relative to the A and C pyrrole nitrogen atoms provides a significant barrier for high-affinity ligand binding. In contrast, the staggered orientation of the proximal histidine found in liganded HbI renders its ligand affinity much more susceptible to packing contacts between F4 and the heme group. These results highlight very different strategies used by cooperative hemoglobins in molluscs and mammals to control ligand affinity by modulation of the stereochemistry on the proximal side of the heme.  相似文献   

16.
The heme active site structure of chloroperoxidase (CPO), a glycoprotein that displays versatile catalytic activities isolated from the marine mold Caldariomyces fumago, has been characterized by two-dimensional NMR spectroscopic studies. All hyperfine shifted resonances from the heme pocket as well as resonances from catalytically relevant amino acid residues including the heme iron ligand (Cys(29)) attributable to the unique catalytic properties of CPO have been firmly assigned through (a) measurement of nuclear Overhauser effect connectivities, (b) prediction of the Curie intercepts from both one- and two-dimensional variable temperature studies, (c) comparison with assignments made for cyanide derivatives of several well characterized heme proteins such as cytochrome c peroxidase, horseradish peroxidase, and manganese peroxidase, and (d) examination of the crystal structural parameters of CPO. The location of protein modification that differentiates the signatures of the two isozymes of CPO has been postulated. The function of the distal histidine (His(105)) in modulating the catalytic activities of CPO is proposed based on the unique arrangement of this residue within the heme cavity. Contrary to the crystal state, the high affinity Mn(II) binding site in CPO (in solution) is not accessible to externally added Mn(II). The results presented here provide a reasonable explanation for the discrepancies in the literature between spectroscopists and crystallographers concerning the manganese binding site in this unique protein. Our study indicates that results from NMR investigations of the protein in solution can complement the results revealed by x-ray diffraction studies of the crystal form and thus provide a complete and better understanding of the actual structure of the protein.  相似文献   

17.
The monomeric hemoglobin of the nemertean worm Cerebratulus lacteus functions as an oxygen storage protein to maintain neural activity under hypoxic conditions. It shares a large, apolar matrix tunnel with other small hemoglobins, which has been implicated as a potential ligand migration pathway. Here we explore ligand migration and binding within the distal heme pocket, to which the tunnel provides access to ligands from the outside. FTIR/TDS experiments performed at cryogenic temperatures reveal the presence of three transient ligand docking sites within the distal pocket, the primary docking site B on top of pyrrole C and secondary sites C and D. Site C is assigned to a cavity adjacent to the distal portion of the heme pocket, surrounded by the B and E helices. It has an opening to the apolar tunnel and is expected to be on the pathway for ligand entry and exit, whereas site D, circumscribed by TyrB10, GlnE7, and the CD corner, most likely is located on a side pathway of ligand migration. Flash photolysis experiments at ambient temperatures indicate that the rate-limiting step for ligand binding to CerHb is migration through the apolar channel to site C. Movement from C to B and iron-ligand bond formation involve low energy barriers and thus are very rapid processes in the wt protein.  相似文献   

18.
Cytoglobin is a recently discovered hemeprotein belonging to the globin superfamily together with hemoglobin, myoglobin and neuroglobin. Although distributed in almost all human tissues, cytoglobin has not been ascribed a specific function. Human cytoglobin is composed of 190 amino acid residues. Sequence alignments show that a protein core region (about 150 residues) is structurally related to hemoglobin and myoglobin, being complemented by about 20 extra residues both on the N and C termini. In the absence of exogenous ligands (e.g. O2), the cytoglobin distal HisE7 residue is coordinated to the heme Fe atom, thus decreasing the ligand affinity. The crystal structure of human cytoglobin (2.1 A resolution, 21.3% R-factor) highlights a three-over-three alpha-helical globin fold, covering residues 18-171; the 1-17 N-terminal, and the 172-190 C-terminal residue segments are disordered in both molecules of the crystal asymmetric unit. Heme hexa-coordination is evident in one of the two cytoglobin chains, whereas alternate conformation for the heme distal region, achieving partial heme penta-coordination, is observed in the other. Human cytoglobin displays a large apolar protein matrix cavity, next to the heme, not related to the myoglobin cavities recognized as temporary ligand docking stations. The cavity, which may provide a heme ligand diffusion pathway, is connected to the external space through a narrow tunnel nestled between the globin G and H helices.  相似文献   

19.
The homodimeric hemoglobin (HbN) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis displays an extremely high oxygen binding affinity and cooperativity. Sequence alignment with other hemoglobins suggests that the proximal F8 ligand is histidine, the distal E7 residue is leucine, and the B10 position is occupied by tyrosine. To determine how these heme pocket residues regulate the ligand binding affinities and physiological functions of HbN, we have measured the resonance Raman spectra of the O(2), CO, and OH(-) derivatives of the wild type protein and the B10 Tyr --> Leu and Phe mutants. Taken together these data demonstrate a unique distal environment in which the heme bound ligands strongly interact with the B10 tyrosine residue. The implications of these data on the physiological functions of HbN and another heme-containing protein, cytochrome c oxidase, are considered.  相似文献   

20.
Hemoglobins (Hbs) reversibly bind gaseous diatomic ligands (e.g., O2) as the sixth heme axial ligand of the penta-coordinate deoxygenated form. Selected members of the Hb superfamily, however, display a functionally relevant hexa-coordinate heme Fe atom in their deoxygenated state. Endogenous heme hexa-coordination is generally provided in these Hbs by the E7 residue (often His), which thus modulates accessibility to the heme distal pocket and reactivity of the heme toward exogenous ligands. Such a pivotal role of the E7 residue is prominently shown by analysis of the functional and structural properties of insect Hbs. Here, we report the 2.6 A crystal structure of oxygenated Gasterophilus intestinalis Hb1, a Hb known to display a penta-coordinate heme in the deoxygenated form. The structure is analyzed in comparison with those of Drosophila melanogaster Hb, exhibiting a hexa-coordinate heme in its deoxygenated derivative, and of Chironomus thummi thummi HbIII, which displays a penta-coordinate heme in the deoxygenated form. Despite evident structural differences in the heme distal pockets, the distinct molecular mechanisms regulating O2 binding to the three insect Hbs result in similar O(2 affinities (P50 values ranging between 0.12 torr and 0.46 torr).  相似文献   

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