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1.
Abstract

Visible and near infrared magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of heme proteins and enzymes as well as those of a protein-free heme bound to 2-methylimidazole were recorded and compared at 4.2 K in unrelaxed metastable and relaxed equilibrium heme stereochemistry. The relaxed and unrelaxed stereochemistries of a 5-coordinate ferrous heme were generated by chemical reduction of iron at room temperature before freezing the sample and by photolysis of CO or O2 complexes at 4.2 K, respectively. The results are discussed in terms of a protein contribution into energies of the Fe-Nepslion(His) and Fe-N(pyrrols) bonds and their change on a ligand binding. We observed and analyzed cases of weak (myoglobin, hemoglobin) and strong (leghemoglobin, peroxidases) constraints imposed by the protein conformation on the proximal heme stereochemistry by comparing the bond energies in proteins with those inthe protoheme-(2-methylimidazole) model compound. The role of a protein moiety in modulating the ligand binding properties of leghemoglobin and the heme reactivity of horseradish peroxidase is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
In the spectral region 350-800 nm at 4.2 K we measured magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the pentacoordinated complex of protcheme with 2-methylimidazole, deoxyleghemoglobin, neutral and alkaline forms of reduced horseradish peroxidase in the equilibrium states, as well as in non-equilibrium states produced by low-temperature photolysis of their carbon monoxide derivatives. Earlier the corresponding results have been obtained for myoglobin, hemoglobin and cytochromes P-450 and P-420. The energies of Fe-N (proximal His) and Fe-N(pyrroles) bonds and their changes upon ligand binding in heme proteins and enzymes were compared with those in the model heme complex thus providing conformational contribution into stereochemistry of the active site. The examples of weak and strong conformational "pressure" on stereochemistry were analysed and observed. If conformational energy contribution into stereochemistry prevails the electronic one the heme stereochemistry remains unchanged on ligand binding as it was observed for leghemoglobin and alkaline horseradish peroxidase. The change of bond energies in myoglobin and hemoglobin on ligand binding are comparable with those in protein free pentacoordinated protoheme, giving an example of weak conformational contribution to heme stereochemistry. The role of protein conformation energy in the modulation of ligand binding properties of heme in leghemoglobin relative to those in myoglobins is discussed. The most striking result were obtained in the study of reduced horseradish peroxidase in the pH region of 6.0-10.2. It was found that such different perturbations as ligand binding and heme-linked ionization of the distal amino acid residue induce identical changes in heme stereochemistry. Neither heme-linked ionization in the carbon monoxide complex nor the geometry of Fe-Co bond affect the heme local structure of photoproducts. These and other findings suggest a very low conformation mobility of horseradish peroxidase whose protein constraints appear to allow only two preferable geometries of specific amino acid residues that form the heme pocket. The role of the two tertiary structure constraints on the heme in the mechanism of horseradish peroxidase function is discussed. It is supposed that one conformation produces a heme environment suitable for two-electron oxidation of the native enzyme to compound I by hydrogen peroxide while another conformation changes the heme stereochemistry in the direction favourable for back reduction of compound I by the substrate to the resting enzyme through two one-electron steps. The switch from one tertiary structure to another is expected to be induced by substrate bind  相似文献   

3.
The visible and near infrared magnetic circular dichroism spectra of chemically reduced horseradish peroxidase at neutral and alkaline pH values and 5-coordinate protoheme-(2-methylimidazole) at pH 9.1 were compared at 4.2 K with those of photolysis products of their carbon monoxide complexes. From the results obtained we concluded that: (i) there are two protein conformations of HRP which determine the geometry of the Fe-N(His) bond; (ii) the transition from one conformation (heme stereochemistry) to another can be induced by either heme-linked ionization or ligand binding; (iii) a trigger mechanism for switching between two conformations has to exist.  相似文献   

4.
We present an investigation of the molecular basis of the modulation of oxygen affinity in heme proteins using computer simulation. QM-MM calculations are applied to explore distal and proximal effects on O(2) binding to the heme, while classical molecular dynamics simulations are employed to investigate ligand migration across the polypeptide to the active site. Trends in binding energies and in the kinetic constants are illustrated through a number of selected examples highlighting the virtues and the limitations of the applied methodologies. These examples cover a wide range of O(2)-affinities, and include: the truncated-N and truncated-O hemoglobins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the mammalian muscular O(2) storage protein: myoglobin, the hemoglobin from the parasitic nematode Ascaris lumbricoides, the oxygen transporter in the root of leguminous plants: leghemoglobin, the Cerebratulus lacteus nerve tissue hemoglobin, and the Alcaligenes xyloxidans cytochrome c'.  相似文献   

5.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical spectra are used as probes of the heme and its ligands in ferric and ferrous leghemoglobin. The proximal ligand to the heme iron atom of ferric soybean leghemoglobin is identified as imidazole by comparison of the EPR of leghemoglobin hydroxide, azide, and cyanide with the corresponding derivatives of human hemoglobin. Optical spectra show that ferric soybean leghemoglobin near room temperature is almost entirely in the high spin state. At 77 K the optical spectrum is that of a low spin compound, while at 1.6 K the EPR is that of a low spin form resembling bis-imidazole heme. Acetate binds to ferric leghemoglobin to form a high spin complex as judged from the optical spectrum. The EPR of this complex is that of high spin ferric heme in a nearly axial environment. The complexes of ferrous leghemoglobin with substituted pyridines exhibit optical absorption maxima near 685 nm, whose absorption maxima and extinctions are strongly dependent on the nature of the substitutents of the pyridine ring; electron withdrawing groups on the pyridine ring shift the absorption maxima to lower energy. A crystal field analysis of the EPR of nicotinate derivatives of ferric leghemoblobin demonstrates that the pyridine nitrogen is also bound to the heme iron in the ferric state. These findings lead us to picture leghemoglobin as a somewhat flexible molecule in which the transition region between the E and F helices may act as a hinge, opening a small amount at higher temperature to a stable configuration in which the protein is high spin and can accommodate exogenous ligand molecules and closing at low temperature to a second stable configuration in which the protein is low spin and in which close approach of the E helix permits the distal histidine to become the principal sixth ligand.  相似文献   

6.
Rich AM  Ellis PJ  Tennant L  Wright PE  Armstrong RS  Lay PA 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16491-16499
The NO adducts of leghemoglobin (Lb) are implicated in biological processes, but only the adduct with ferrous Lb (Lb(II)NO) has been characterized previously. We report the first characterization of ferric nitrosylleghemoglobin (Lb(III)NO) and XAS experiments performed on frozen aqueous solutions of Lb(II)NO and Lb(III)NO at 10 K. The XANES and electronic spectra of the NO adducts are similar in shape and energies to the myoglobin (Mb) analogues. The environment of the Fe atom has been refined using multiple-scattering (MS) analyses of the XAFS data. For Lb(II)NO, the MS analysis resulted in an averaged Fe-N(p)(pyrrole) distance of 2.02 A, an Fe-N(epsilon)(imidazole) distance of 1.98 A, an Fe-N(NO) distance of 1.77 A, and an Fe-N-O angle of 147 degrees. The Fe-N(NO) distance and Fe-N-O angle obtained from the analysis of Lb(II)NO are in good agreement with those determined crystallographically for [Fe(TPP)(NO)] (TPP, tetraphenylporphyrinato), with and without 1-methylimidazole (1-MeIm) as the sixth ligand, and the MS XAFS structures reported previously for the myoglobin (Mb(II)NO) analogue and [Fe(TPP)(NO)]. The MS analysis of Lb(III)NO yielded an average Fe-N(p) distance of 2.00 A, an Fe-N(epsilon) distance of 1.89 A, an Fe-N(NO) distance of 1.68 A, and an Fe-N-O angle of 173 degrees. These bond lengths and angles are consistent with those determined previously for the myoglobin analogue (Mb(III)NO) and the crystal structures of the model complexes, [Fe(III)(TPP)(NO)(OH(2))](+) and [Fe(OEP)(NO)](+) (OEP, octaethylporphyrinato). The final XAFS R values were 16.1 and 18.2% for Lb(II)NO and Lb(III)NO, respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Dynamics of dioxygen and carbon monoxide binding to soybean leghemoglobin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The association of dioxygen and carbon monoxide to soybean leghemoglobin (Lb) has been studied by laser flash photolysis at temperatures from 10 to 320 K and times from 50 ns to 100 s. Infrared spectra of the bound and the photodissociated state were investigated between 10 and 20 K. The general features of the binding process in leghemoglobin are similar to the ones found in myoglobin. Below about 200 K, the photodissociated ligands stay in the heme pocket and rebinding is not exponential in time, implying a distributed enthalpy barrier between pocket and heme. At around 300 K, ligands migrate from the solvent through the protein to the heme pocket, and a steady state is set up between the ligands in the solvent and in the heme pocket. The association rate, lambda on, is mainly controlled by the final binding step at the heme, the bond formation with the heme iron. Differences between Lb and other heme proteins show up in the details of the various steps. The faster association rate in Lb compared to sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) is due to a faster bond formation. The migration from the solvent to the heme pocket is much faster in Lb than in Mb. The low-temperature binding (B----A) and the infrared spectra of CO in the bound state A and the photodissociated state B are essentially solvent-independent in Mb, but depend strongly on solvent in Lb. These features can be correlated with the x-ray structure.  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.
Leghemoglobin shows extreme high affinity behavior in the binding of both oxygen and CO. We have determined the temperature dependence of the rate constants for ligation of oxygen and CO and from these data the thermodynamics (delta G0, delta H0, delta S0) of ligation for the purified components of soybean leghemoglobin. X-ray crystallography has shown that the heme cavity can easily accommodate ligands the size of nicotinate, and analysis of extended x-ray absorption fine structure data has shown that the Fe atom is in the mean plane of the heme in the leghemoglobin-CO complex. Ligation of oxygen and CO are in accord with this picture in that the Ea for oxygen binding is that expected for a diffusion controlled reaction and delta S0 for the ligation of both CO and oxygen is consistent with the simple immobilization of the ligand at the Fe, with no evidence for significant conformational changes in the protein or changes in solvation. At 20 degrees C the rate constants for oxygen and CO binding vary by 26-44% among the eight leghemoglobin components. For azide binding the variation is a factor of 2. These variations appear to arise from amino acid substitutions outside either the heme cavity or the two major paths for ligand entry to the heme. The distribution of leghemoglobin components varies with the age of the soybean nodule during the growing season. The changes in composition alone, however, would only allow the concentration of free oxygen to vary by about 3%. This finding calls into question models that ascribe a significant functional role to changes in the distribution of leghemoglobin components in regulating oxygen concentration in the nodule.  相似文献   

10.
Kundu S  Hargrove MS 《Proteins》2003,50(2):239-248
Leghemoglobins facilitate diffusion of oxygen through root tissue to a bacterial terminal oxidase in much the same way that myoglobin transports oxygen from blood to muscle cell mitochondria. Leghemoglobin serves an additional role as an oxygen scavenger to prevent inhibition of nitrogen fixation. For this purpose, the oxygen affinity of soybean leghemoglobin is 20-fold greater than myoglobin, resulting from an 8-fold faster association rate constant combined with a 3-fold slower dissociation rate constant. Although the biochemical mechanism used by myoglobin to bind oxygen has been described in elegant detail, an explanation for the difference in affinity between these two structurally similar proteins is not obvious. The present work demonstrates that, despite their similar structures, leghemoglobin uses methods different from myoglobin to regulate ligand affinity. Oxygen and carbon monoxide binding to a comprehensive set of leghemoglobin distal heme pocket mutant proteins in comparison to their myoglobin counterparts has revealed some of these mechanisms. The "distal histidine" provides a crucial hydrogen bond to stabilize oxygen in myoglobin but has little effect on bound oxygen in leghemoglobin and is retained mainly for reasons of protein stability and prevention of heme loss. Furthermore, soybean leghemoglobin uses an unusual combination of HisE7 and TyrB10 to sustain a weak stabilizing interaction with bound oxygen. Thus, the leghemoglobin distal heme pocket provides a much lower barrier to oxygen association than occurs in myoglobin and oxygen dissociation is regulated from the proximal heme pocket.  相似文献   

11.
Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of reduced cytochromes P450 and P420 in equilibrium and non-equilibrium protein conformations are compared at 4.2 K for the 350-800 spectral region. Non-equilibrium forms have been produced by photolysis of CO-complexes at 4.2 K. The differences between MCD spectra of proteins in equilibrium and non-equilibrium conformations, in particular for the visible region, show clearly the structural changes in the heme iron coordination sphere to occur on ligand binding. The comparison of the Soret MCD spectra of reduced proteins in their equilibrium and non-equilibrium forms with those of other high-spin ferrous hemoproteins suggest that mercaptide (RS-) is the protein ligand of the heme iron in reduced P450, as well as in its CO-complex, and that imidazole of histidine is the fifth ligand of the iron both in reduced P420 and its CO-complex. The thermal recombination of the photoproducts with CO have been studied. When temperature rises from 4.2 to 77 K for two hours both proteins have similar temperature characteristics during the recombination processes. The recombination begins at T approximately equal to 10 K and is completed at approximately equal to 50 K. The temperature at which half of the total photolyzed molecules are restored to the CO-form is equal to 25 K. For products of photolysis of CO-complexes of myoglobin and hemoglobin under the same heating conditions these temperatures are equal to 35 and 23 K respectively. Thus, the photoproducts of P450, P420 and hemoglobin have similar parameters of low-temperature recombination and the kinetics of this process is faster than for photodissociated myoglobin.  相似文献   

12.
Ligand binding to heme proteins: connection between dynamics and function   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Ligand binding to heme proteins is studied by using flash photolysis over wide ranges in time (100 ns-1 ks) and temperature (10-320 K). Below about 200 K in 75% glycerol/water solvent, ligand rebinding occurs from the heme pocket and is nonexponential in time. The kinetics is explained by a distribution, g(H), of the enthalpic barrier of height H between the pocket and the bound state. Above 170 K rebinding slows markedly. Previously we interpreted the slowing as a "matrix process" resulting from the ligand entering the protein matrix before rebinding. Experiments on band III, an inhomogeneously broadened charge-transfer band near 760 nm (approximately 13,000 cm-1) in the photolyzed state (Mb*) of (carbonmonoxy)myoglobin (MbCO), force us to reinterpret the data. Kinetic hole-burning measurements on band III in Mb* establish a relation between the position of a homogeneous component of band III and the barrier H. Since band III is red-shifted by 116 cm-1 in Mb* compared with Mb, the relation implies that the barrier in relaxed Mb is 12 kJ/mol higher than in Mb*. The slowing of the rebinding kinetics above 170 K hence is caused by the relaxation Mb*----Mb, as suggested by Agmon and Hopfield [(1983) J. Chem. Phys. 79, 2042-2053]. This conclusion is supported by a fit to the rebinding data between 160 and 290 K which indicates that the entire distribution g(H) shifts. Above about 200 K, equilibrium fluctuations among conformational substates open pathways for the ligands through the protein matrix and also narrow the rate distribution. The protein relaxations and fluctuations are nonexponential in time and non-Arrhenius in temperature, suggesting a collective nature for these protein motions. The relaxation Mb*----Mb is essentially independent of the solvent viscosity, implying that this motion involves internal parts of the protein. The protein fluctuations responsible for the opening of the pathways, however, depend strongly on the solvent viscosity, suggesting that a large part of the protein participates. While the detailed studies concern MbCO, similar data have been obtained for MbO2 and CO binding to the beta chains of human hemoglobin and hemoglobin Zürich. The results show that protein dynamics is essential for protein function and that the association coefficient for binding from the solvent at physiological temperatures in all these heme proteins is governed by the barrier at the heme.  相似文献   

13.
The visible and near infrared magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of equilibrium high-spin ferrous derivatives of myoglobin, hemoglobin, horseradish peroxidase and mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase at 15 K are compared with those of the corresponding proteins in nonequilibrium conformations produced by low-temperature photodissociation of CO-complexes of these proteins as well as of O2-complexes of myoglobin and hemoglobin. Over all the spectral region (450-800 nm) the intensities of MCD bands of hemoproteins studied in equilibrium conformation are shown to be strongly temperature-dependent, including a negative band at ca. 630 nm and positive bands at ca. 690 nm and at ca. 760 nm. In contrast to the absorption spectra, the low-temperature MCD spectra of high-spin ferrous hemoproteins differ significantly, reflecting the peculiarities in the heme iron coordination sphere which are created by a protein conformation. The MCD spectra reveal clearly the structural changes in the heme environment which occur on ligand binding. On the basis of assignment of d leads to d and charge-transfer transitions in the near infrared region the correlation is suggested between the wavelength position of the MCD band at approx. 690 nm and the value of iron out-of-plane displacement as well as between the location of the band at approx. 760 nm and the Fe-N epsilon (proximal histidine) bond strength (length) in equilibrium and nonequilibrium conformations of the hemoproteins studied. The high sensitivity of low-temperature MCD spectra to geometry at heme iron is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) and soybean leghemoglobin (Lba) are two small, monomeric hemoglobins that share a common globin fold but differ widely in many other aspects. Lba has a much higher affinity for most ligands, and the two proteins use different distal and proximal heme pocket regulatory mechanisms to control ligand binding. Removal of the constraint provided by covalent attachment of the proximal histidine to the F-helices of these proteins decreases oxygen affinity in Lba and increases oxygen affinity in Mb, mainly because of changes in oxygen dissociation rate constants. Hence, Mb and Lba use covalent constraints in opposite ways to regulate ligand binding. Swapping the F-helices of the two proteins brings about similar effects, highlighting the importance of this helix in proximal heme pocket regulation of ligand binding. The F7 residue in Mb is capable of weaving a hydrogen-bonding network that holds the proximal histidine in a fixed orientation. On the contrary, the F7 residue in Lba lacks this property and allows the proximal histidine to assume a conformation favorable for higher ligand binding affinity. Geminate recombination studies indicate that heme iron reactivity on picosecond timescales is not the dominant cause for the effects observed in each mutation. Results also indicate that in Lba the proximal and distal pocket mutations probably influence ligand binding independently. These results are discussed in the context of current hypotheses for proximal heme pocket structure and function.  相似文献   

16.
Andrew CR  Green EL  Lawson DM  Eady RR 《Biochemistry》2001,40(13):4115-4122
Resonance Raman (RR) studies have been conducted on Alcaligenes xylosoxidans cytochrome c', a mono-His ligated hemoprotein which reversibly binds NO and CO but not O(2). Recent crystallographic characterization of this protein has revealed the first example of a hemoprotein which can utilize both sides of its heme (distal and proximal) for binding exogenous ligands to its Fe center. The present RR investigation of the Fe coordination and heme pocket environments of ferrous, carbonyl, and nitrosyl forms of cytochrome c' in solution fully supports the structures determined by X-ray crystallography and offers insights into mechanisms of ligand discrimination in heme-based sensors. Ferrous cytochrome c' reacts with CO to form a six-coordinate heme-CO complex, whereas reaction with NO results in cleavage of the proximal linkage to give a five-coordinate heme-NO adduct, despite the relatively high stretching frequency (231 cm(-1)) of the ferrous Fe-N(His) bond. RR spectra of the six-coordinate CO adduct indicate that CO binds to the Fe in a nonpolar environment in line with its location in the hydrophobic distal heme pocket. On the other hand, RR data for the five-coordinate NO adduct suggest a positively polarized environment for the NO ligand, consistent with its binding close to Arg 124 on the opposite (proximal) side of the heme. Parallels between certain physicochemical properties of cytochrome c' and those of heme-based sensor proteins raise the possibility that the latter may also utilize both sides of their hemes to discriminate between NO and CO binding.  相似文献   

17.
We have compared the structures of horse azide methemoglobin and methemoglobin (MetHb) at 2.8 Å resolution by X-ray difference Fourier analysis. Of four low-spin liganded Hb derivatives (nitric oxide Hb, carbon monoxide Hb, cyanide MetHb, and azide MetHb), azide MetHb is closest in structure to MetHb. In azide MetHb the ligands are co-ordinated end-on at angles of about 125 ° to the heme axes, which is similar to the stereochemistry assumed by azide in binding to free heme. Because of its bent binding geometry, azide encounters less interference in binding and perturbs the protein structure less than carbon monoxide and cyanide, which are smaller, but prefer linear axial co-ordination to heme. Steric interactions between ligand and protein are greater on the β chain, where the E helix is pushed away from the heme relative to MetHb, than on the α chain. Iron position is the same and heme stereochemistry and position are very similar in azide MetHb and MetHb.  相似文献   

18.
Structure of nitric oxide hemoglobin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have compared the structure of horse nitric oxide hemoglobin (HbNO) and methemoglobin in the oxy quaternary structure by difference Fourier analysis at 2.8 Å resolution. Both nitric oxide and oxygen assume bent co-ordination geometry and form low-spin complexes in binding to heme; on the basis of preferred ligand and heme stereochemistry, HbNO is the closest analog of HbO2 (oxyhemoglobin) examined to date. To the resolution of the X-ray data, the stereochemistry of the heme-NO complex in hemoglobin and the corresponding free heme complex appears similar. In contrast, the ligand pockets in hemoglobin hinder binding of cyanide and carbon monoxide in their preferred linear axial co-ordination modes and force them to assume a strained off-axis binding stereochemistry. The structural similarity between HbNO and HbO2 is reflected in their kinetic behavior, which is similar, and distinct from that of carboxyhemoglobin.  相似文献   

19.
Potential toxicity of transition metals like Hg, Cu and Cd are well known and their affinity toward proteins is of great concern. This work explores the selective nature of interactions of Cu2+, Hg2+ and Cd2+ with the heme proteins leghemoglobin, myoglobin and cytochrome C. The binding profiles were analyzed using absorbance spectrum and steady-state fluorescence spectroscopy. Thermodynamic parameters like enthalpy, entropy and free energy changes were derived by isothermal calorimetry and consequent binding parameters were compared for these heme proteins. Free energy (DG) values revealed Cu2+ binding toward myoglobin and leghemoglobin to be specific and facile in contrast to weak binding for Hg2+ or Cd2+. Time correlated single photon counting indicated significant alteration in excited state lifetimes for metal complexed myoglobin and leghemoglobin suggesting bimolecular collisions to be involved. Interestingly, none of these cations showed significant affinity for cytochrome c pointing that, presence of conserved sequences or heme group is not the only criteria for cation binding toward heme proteins, but the microenvironment of the residues or a specific folding pattern may be responsible for these differential conjugation profile. Binding of these cations may modulate the conformation and functions of these biologically important proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Circular dichroic (CD) spectra of soybean leghemoglobin, and some of its liganded derivatives were measured over the wavelength range of 650 to 200 nm. The heme-related circular dichroic bands in the visible, Soret and ultraviolet wavelength regions exhibit Cotton effects characteristic of each of the compounds examined. The positions of the dichroic bands vary with ligand substitutions and the oxidation state of the iron. All leghemoglobin derivatives, except the apoprotein, exhibit negative circular dichroic bands in the region of Soret absorption. In this region the optical activity of compounds with high-spin moments is greater than that of compounds with low or intermediate spin moments. The ellipticity of the heme band at about 260 nm is also altered by ligand binding and spin state. The dichroic spectra in the far-ultraviolet region indicated a high extent of alpha-helical structure (about 70%) in the native leghemoglobin and its liganded derivatives. The helicality of the apoprotein seems to diminish suggesting a decrease caused by the removal of the heme.  相似文献   

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