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1.
By use of a newly constructed CD instrument, infrared magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra were observed for various myoglobin derivatives. The ferric high spin myoglobin derivatives such as fluoride, water and hydroxide complexes, commonly exhibited the MCD spectra consisting of positive A terms. Therefore, the results reinforced the assignment that the infrared band is the charge transfer transition to the degenerate excited state (eg (dpi)). Since the fraction of A term estimated was approximately 80% for myoglobin fluoride and approximately 35% for myoglobin water, the effective symmetry for myoglobin fluoride is determined to be as close as D4h, while that for myoglobin water seems to have lower symmetry components. The ferric low spin derivatives such as myoglobin cyanide, myoglobin imidazole and myoglobin azide showed positive MCD spectra which are very similar to the electronic absorption spectra. These MCD spectra were assigned to the charge transfer transitions from porphyrin pi to iron d orbitals on the ground that they were observed only for the ferric low spin groups and insensitive to the axial ligands. The lack of temperature dependence in the MCD magnitude indicated that the MCD spectra are attributable to the Faraday B terms. Deoxymyoglobin, the ferrous high spin derivative, had fairly strong positive MCD around 760 nm with an anisotropy factor (delta epsilon/epsilon) of 1.4-10(-4). It shows some small MCD bands from 800 to 1800 nm. Among the ferrous low spin derivatives, carbonmonoxymyoglobin did not give any observable MCD in the infrared region while oxymyoglobin seemed to have significant MCD in the range from 700 to 1000 nm.  相似文献   

2.
Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra were observed for native (Fe(III)) horseradish peroxidase (peroxidase, EC 1.11.1.7), its alkaline form and fluoro- and cyano-derivatives, and also for reduced (Fe(II)) horseradish peroxidase and its carbonmonoxy-- and cyano- derivatives. MCD spectra were obtained for the cyano derivative of Fe(III) horseradish peroxidase, and reduced horseradish peroxidase and its carbonmonoxy- derivative nearly identical with those for the respective myoglobin derivatives. The alkaline form of horseradish peroxidase exhibits a completely different MCD spectrum from that of myoglobin hydroxide. Thus it shows an MCD spectrum which falls into the ferric low-spin heme grouping. Native horseradish peroxidase and its fluoro derivatives show almost identical MCD spectra with those for the respective myoglobin derivatives in the visible region, though some changes were detected in the Soret region. Therefore it is concluded that the MCD spectra on the whole are sensitive to the spin state of the heme iron rather than to the porphyrin structures. The cyanide derivative of reduced horseradish peroxidase exhibited a characteristic MCD spectrum of the low-spin ferrous derivative like oxy-myoglobin.  相似文献   

3.
The chromatrope pigment of Mermis nigrescens (Phylum: Aschelminthes, Class: Nematoda) was previously thought to have a role in photoreception. In this work it is shown to be an oxyhemoglobin whose absorption spectrum in vivo and in extracts resembles that of Ascaris oxyhemoglobins in having a weak alpha-band absorptivity. The extracted hemoglobin binds O2 and CO reversibly and with an affinity higher than that of the same concentration of horse hemoglobin. The Soret band of the deoxy derivative is unusually low and broad. Absorptivities and lambdamax for absorption bands of the oxy, deoxy and CO derivatives are tabulated for comparison with other hemoglobins. Microchemical procedures were developed which revealed that the chromatrope contains an average of 5-10(-12) mol of non-dialysable protoheme. Thus the hemoglobin concentration in the approx. 0.5 nl chromatrope volume is on the order of 10 mM (heme). The O2 binding ability and high in vivo concentration of this hemoglobin make possible a role in O2 storage or facilitation of O2 diffusion.  相似文献   

4.
Interaction of acetylphenylhydrazine with oxyhemoglobin A in a hemolysate or in intact red cells resulted in the formation of ferrihemochromes as shown by a characteristic optical spectrum. The same optical spectrum was observed in a suspension of red cell ghosts containing numerous Heinz bodies. Electron paramagnetic resonance of actylphenylhydrazine-incubated red cells disclosed the presence of previously identified reversible ferrihemochromes, which can be reduced to functional hemoglobin, and irreversible ferrihemochromes, which cannot be reduced to functional hemoglobin. (Ferrihemochromes are defined as low spin forms of ferric hemoglobin having heme ligands endogenous to the protein structure). In contrast, only irreversible ferrihemochromes could be observed in ghosts containing Heinz bodies. In addition both optical and magnetic features of sulfhemoglobin were observed in an acetylphenylhydrazine-treated red cell hemolysate. Similar optical features are produced by the interaction of aromatic nitrogen-containg reductants with purified oxyhemoglobin in the presence of (NH4)2S. This reaction is not effected by the presence of catalase, suggesting that H2O2 is not an intermediate of the reaction. It is concluded that the mechanism of action of acetylphenylhydrazine with oxyhemoglobin is two-fold, ultimate reduction to high spin ferric hemoglobin followed by ferrihemochrome formation. Thus it appears that the pathway of denaturation of hemolytic anemias and thalassemia or induced by chemical reagents, entails a common route involving the formation of ferric hemoglobin by a reductive mechanism, followed by reversible ferrihemochromes, irreversible ferrihemochromes, and ultimately, precipitation.  相似文献   

5.
1. Leghaemoglobins from soya-bean (Glycine max) and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) root nodules were purified by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose phosphate columns at pH8.0 and pH5.8, to avoid the relatively low pH (5.2) commonly used to purify these proteins. 2. E.p.r. (electron-paramagnetic-resonance) spectra of the fluoride, azide, hydroxide and cyanide complexes of these ferric leghaemoglobins were very similar to the spectra of the corresponding myoglobin derivatives, indicating that the immediate environment of the iron in leghaemoglobin and myoglobin is similar, an imidazole moiety of histidine being the proximal ligand to the haem iron [cf. Appleby, Blumberg, Peisach, Wittenberg & Wittenberg (1976) J. Biol. Chem.251, 6090-6096]. 3. E.p.r. spectra of the acid-metleghaemoglobins showed prominent high-spin features very near g=6 and g=2 and, unlike myoglobin, small low-spin absorptions near g=2.26, 2.72 and 3.14. The width of the g=6 absorption derivative at 10-20K was about 4-4.5mT, similar to the value for acid-methaemoglobin. In contrast, a recently published (Appleby et al., 1976) spectrum of acid-metleghaemoglobin a had less high-spin character and a much broader absorption derivative around g=6. 4. E.p.r. spectra of ferric leghaemoglobin nicotinate and imidazole complexes suggest that the low-spin absorption near g=3.14 can be attributed to a trace of ferric leghaemoglobin nicotinate, and those near g=2.26 and 2.72 are from an endogenous dihistidyl haemichrome. 5. A large e.p.r. signal at g=2 in all samples of crude leghaemoglobin was shown to be from nitrosyl-leghaemoglobin. A soya-bean sample contained 27+/-3% of the latter. A previously unidentified form of soya-bean ferrous leghaemoglobin a was shown to be its nitrosyl derivative. If this is not an artifact, and occurs in the root nodule, the nitrosyl radical may interfere with the function of leghaemoglobin.  相似文献   

6.
Circular dichroism spectra of cytochrome c peroxidase from baker's yeast, those of the reduced enzyme, the carbonyl, cyanide and fluoride derivatives and the hydrogen peroxide compound, Compound I, have been recorded in the wavelength range 200 to 660 nm. All derivatives show negative Soret Cotton effects. The results suggest that the heme group is surrounded by tightly packed amino acid sidechains and that there is a histidine residue bound to the fifth coordination site of the heme iron. The native ferric enzyme is probably pentacoordinated. The circular dichroism spectra of the ligand compounds indicate that the ligands form a nonlinear bond to the heme iron as a result of steric hindrance in the vicinity of the heme. The spectrum of Compound I shows no perturbation of the porphyrin symmetry. The dichroic spectrum of the native enzyme in the far-ultraviolet wave-length region suggests that the secondary structure consists of roughly equal amounts of alpha-helical, beta-structure and unordered structure. After the removal of the heme group no great changes in the secondary structure can be observed.  相似文献   

7.
Circular dichroism (CD) and optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) spectra of several liganded derivatives of the monomer and polymer hemoglobin components of the marine annelid, Glycera dibranchiata were measured over the wavelength range 650--195 nm. The differences observed between the monomer and polymer components for the heme dichroic bands in the visible, Soret and ultraviolet wavelength regions seem to result from changes in the heme environment, geometry and coordination state of the central heme iron in these proteins. Within the Soret region, the liganded derivatives of the monomer hemoglobin exhibit predominantly negative circular dichroic bands. The heme band at 260 nm is also absent for the monomer hemoglobin. The ORD and CD spectra in the far-ultraviolet, peptide absorbing region suggest also differences in the alpha-helix content of the monomer and polymer hemoglobins. The values for the single-chain G. dibranchiata hemoglobin are in the expected range (about 70% alpha-helix) as predicted by the X-ray structure of this protein. The lower estimates of the alpha-helix content for the polymer hemoglobin (approx. 50%), may reflect the differences in amino acid composition, primary structure and polypeptide chain foldings. Changes in oxidation state and ligand binding appears to have no pronounced effect on the helicity of either the monomer or polymer hemoglobins. The removal of the heme moiety from the monomer hemoglobin did result in a major decrease in its helix content similar to the loss of heme from myoglobin.  相似文献   

8.
The optical absorption and circular dichroic spectra of human erythrocyte catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) and its cyanide, azide, and fluoride derivatives over the wavelength range of 210 to 700 nm are reported. Treatment with acid or alkaline solutions causes spectral changes which may be due to dissociation of the enzyme into subunits and removal of the heme group from the protein. The fractions of the protein structure present as alpha helix, beta pleated sheet, and unordered structure have been estimated from the CD spectrum in the far-ultraviolet region. The CD spectra also indicate that the protein conformation does not change appreciably after cyanide binding. The epr spectroscopy of the native enzyme and its cyanide complex are reported. The spectral results are compared with catalase obtained from other mammalian and bacterial sources.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
R D Hershberg  B Chance 《Biochemistry》1975,14(17):3885-3891
The binding of formate ion, a substrate for the peroxidatic reaction of catalase, has been investigated by magnetic resonance techniques. Comparative studies of formate binding to ferric myoglobin have also been performed. The nuclear magnetic relaxation (NMR) rate of formate and water protons is enhanced by the presence of ferric horse liver catalase. The enhancement is not changed significantly by the addition of cyanide, indicating that water and formate are still bound in the presence of cyanide. Formate proton to heme iron distances determined by magnetic resonance techniques indicate that formate does not directly bind to the heme iron of catalase or myoglobin but to the globin, and NMR relaxation occurs as a result of outersphere mechanisms. Evidence that water forms an innersphere complex with the iron atom of the catalase heme is presented. In similar experiments with ferric myoglobin, the addition of cyanide caused a large decrease in the enhancement of the proton relaxation rate of both formate and water, indicating the displacement of water and formate from the heme and the vicinity of the heme, respectively. Broad, high-spin, ferric ion electron paramagnetic resonance absorptions of catalase and myoglobin at room temperature obtained in the presence and absence of formate show that formate does not alter appreciably the heme environment of catalase or myoglobin or the spin state of the heme iron. Studies on the binding of formate to catalase as monitored by changes in the heme absorption spectrum in the visible region show one-to-one stoichiometry with heme concentration. However, the small changes observed in the visible region of the optical spectrum on addition of formate ion are attributed to a secondary effect of formate on the heme environment, rather than direct binding of formate to the heme moiety.  相似文献   

11.
In order to investigate the effect of the alpha beta subunit contacts on the subunit structure of human adult methemoglobin, the hyperfine shifted proton NMR spectra of several high spin complexes (water, cyanate, thiocyanate, formate, fluoride, and nitrite) and low spin complexes (imisazole, azide, and cyanide) of hemoglobin and its isolated subunits were characterized at 220 MHz and 22 degrees C. The spectra of ferric low spin derivatives of the isolated subunits were approximately superimposable on the corresponding hemoglobin spectra. On the other hand, the high spin spectra of the isolated subunits were greatly different from each other. The spectral anomaly in the ferric high spin complexes of the isolated beta subunit were interpreted to indicate other structural change than the hemichrome formation in the beta heme pocket. Difference in the subunit association effect between the high and low spin complexes of the isolated beta subunit was interpreted on the basis of a conformational change of the apoprotein dependent on the spin state of the beta heme iron.  相似文献   

12.
The native ferric and cyanide-bound ferric forms of nine vertebrate and two yeast cytochromes c have been investigated by high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Spectral comparisons have been made among the cytochromes with emphasis on the signal positions for heme and amino acid ligand protons. Consistent with earlier more limited studies of native ferric cytochromes c, the paramagnetically shifted proton NMR signals show little variation among species with up to 50% substitution of amino acids. Proton NMR spectra for the cyanide complexes also show little variation among species. The nitrogen-15 signal for the coordinated cyanide ion is known to be highly variable among other hemoproteins, but the signal covers a range of only 855 to 865 ppm (nitrate ion reference) for vertebrate cytochromes c and 884 to 886 ppm for yeast cytochromes c. The cyanide ligand probe thus reports an amazing conservation of the heme and proximal ligand environment among the cytochromes. Comparative proton and nitrogen-15 chemical shift values are consistent with a slightly stronger proximal histidine imidazole hydrogen bond to an amino acid carbonyl function than is the case for hemoglobin and myoglobin.  相似文献   

13.
We have developed a rapid and useful method for purification of valency hybrid hemoglobins (alpha 2+ beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2+: + denotes ferric heme) from a hemoglobin solution oxidized partially with ferricyanide by preparative high-performance liquid chromatography. This method does not involve the separation of hemoglobin subunits and the reconstitution of ferric and partner ferrous subunits. Using the valency hybrid hemoglobins thus prepared, the effect of the ferric spin state on the alpha 1 beta 2 subunit boundary structure was investigated by measuring the ultraviolet difference absorption spectra between the deoxy and the oxy valency hybrids associated with various ferric ligands (fluoride, aquo, azide and cyanide). All derivatives of both alpha 2+ beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2+ showed the difference spectra characteristic of R-T quaternary structural transition. However, the magnitude of the difference spectral peak observed near 288 nm was larger for high-spin derivatives than for low-spin ones. The magnitude of the peak for the valency hybrid hemoglobin was closely correlated with the difference in the free energy of oxygen binding between the R and T states. Since the R state of high-spin hybrids is considered to be identical to that of low-spin hybrids, we concluded from these results that the alpha 1 beta 2 subunit boundary structure plays an important role in regulating the oxygen affinity of deoxy T state.  相似文献   

14.
Changes in the circular dichroic and absorption spectra were studied on solutions of myoglobin whose histidine residues had been modified by carboxymethylation under denaturing conditions. Carboxymethylation resulted in a dramatic decrease in the molar extinction coefficient in the Soret region indicative of a major change in the heme environment. This was accompanied by a remarkable change in the secondary structure of the protein involving helix-to-random coil transition, indicating that extensive histidine modification prevented unfolded myoglobin from refolding to its native conformation.  相似文献   

15.
Recombinant human myoglobin mutants with the distal His residue (E7, His64) replaced by Leu, Val, or Gln residues were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis and expression in Escherichia coli. Electronic and coordination structures of the ferric heme iron in the recombinant myoglobin proteins were examined by optical absorption, EPR, 1H NMR, magnetic circular dichroism, and x-ray spectroscopy. Mutations, His-->Val and His-->Leu, remove the heme-bound water molecule resulting in a five-coordinate heme iron at neutral pH, while the heme-bound water molecule appears to be retained in the engineered myoglobin with His-->Gln substitution as in the wild-type protein. The distal Val and distal Leu ferric myoglobin mutants at neutral pH exhibited EPR spectra with g perpendicular values smaller than 6, which could be interpreted as an admixture of intermediate (S = 3/2) and high (S = 5/2) spin states. At alkaline pH, the distal Gln mutant is in the same so-called "hydroxy low spin" form as the wild-type protein, while the distal Leu and distal Val mutants are in high spin states. The ligand binding properties of these recombinant myoglobin proteins were studied by measurements of azide equilibrium and cyanide binding. The distal Leu and distal Val mutants exhibited diminished azide affinity and extremely slow cyanide binding, while the distal Gln mutant showed azide affinity and cyanide association rate constants similar to those of the wild-type protein.  相似文献   

16.
We report on oxygen binding to partially oxidized (aquomet) hemoglobin. The fractional saturation with oxygen is evaluated by deconvoluting the optical absorption spectra, in the 500-700 nm wavelength region, in terms of oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin and methemoglobin spectral components. Experiments have been performed with auto-oxidized samples and with samples obtained by mixing ferrous hemoglobin with fully oxidized hemoglobin (mixed samples). An increase in oxygen affinity and a decrease in cooperativity are observed on increasing the amount of ferric hemoglobin in the sample. A high cooperativity (nH approximately 2) is maintained even in the presence of 50-60% ferric hemes. Moreover, for equal amounts of methemoglobin the oxygen affinity is lower and the cooperativity higher for mixed samples than for those auto-oxidized. The results are analyzed within the framework of a modified Monod-Wyman-Changeux allosteric model taking into account the effects brought about by the presence of oxidized hemes and of alpha betta dimers. The distribution of ferric subunits within the tetramers in fully deoxygenated and fully oxygenated samples, as derived from the model, provides details on the cooperative behavior of partially oxidized hemoglobin.  相似文献   

17.
Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy has been utilized to characterize the change in coordination structure in native ferric sperm whale myoglobin upon cyanogen bromide-modification. Comparison of the MCD properties of the ferric high-spin state of cyanogen bromide-modified myoglobin (BrCN-Mb) with those of native ferric horseradish peroxidase and Aplysia myoglobin suggests that ferric BrCN-Mb is a potential MCD model for the pentacoordinate state of ferric high-spin histidine-ligated heme proteins. These five-coordinate heme proteins afford a relatively weak and unsymmetric signal in the Soret region of the MCD spectrum. In contrast, native ferric myoglobin and the benzohydroxamic acid adduct of ferric horseradish peroxidase show a strong and symmetric derivative-shaped Soret MCD signal which is indicative of hexacoordination with water and histidine axial ligands. Therefore it seems that MCD spectroscopy could be used to probe the presence of water ligated to the distal side of ferric high-spin heme proteins. The MCD spectra of the ferric-azide, ferrous-deoxy and ferrous-CO forms of BrCN-Mb have also been measured and compared to those of analogous native myoglobin complexes. The present MCD study has been extended to include new ligands, NO, thiocyanate and cyanate, which bind to ferric BrCN-Mb. With exogenous ligands such as CO, NO and thiocyanate, the coordination structures of the BrCN-Mb complexes are similar to those of the respective native myoglobin adducts. In the case of ferrous-deoxy and ferric-cyanate BrCN-Mb, however, the altered MCD spectra (and EPR for the latter) reveal changes in electronic structure which likely correlate with alterations of the coordination environment of these BrCN-Mb derivatives. Data are also presented which support the proposed tetrazole-bound structure for azide-treated BrCN-Mb (Hori, H., Fujii, M., Shiro, Y., Iizuka, T., Adachi, S. and Morishima, I. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5715-5719) and the inability of the distal histidine of BrCN-Mb to stabilize the ferric ligand-bound state.  相似文献   

18.
1. Photomicrographs of crystals of pure carbonmonoxide hemoglobin of the following species are presented; ox, sheep, hog, dog, turkey, rat, horse, chicken and guinea pig. Photomicrographs of the oxyhemoglobin crystals of the following species are also shown: ox, sheep, hog, dog, rat, horse and guinea pig. The crystals were formed from the pure protein by adding a suitable amount of ethyl alcohol and maintaining a temperature of 0°C., or lower. 2. In some species a sufficient difference is shown between the carbonmonoxide hemoglobin and oxyhemoglobin crystals to distinguish these compounds, but the photographs of crystals of carbonmonoxide hemoglobin and oxyhemoglobin of some species, such as guinea pig, show no appreciable difference. 3. Differences between the carbonmonoxide hemoglobins, as well as between the oxyhemoglobins, of the different species studied are indicated. 4. The carbonmonoxide hemoglobin crystals from the bloods studied are species specific in their nature, and, in many cases, can be distinguished from the analogous oxyhemoglobin by crystallographic study.  相似文献   

19.
A detailed study of the effect of temperature on the m.c.d. (magnetic circular dichroism) spectra of cytochrome c oxidase and some of its derivatives was undertaken to characterize the spin states of haem a and a(3). The fully reduced enzyme contains haem a(3) (2+) in its high-spin form and haem a(2+) in the low-spin state. This conclusion is reached by comparing the spectrum with that of the mixed-valence CO derivatives and its photolysis product. The cyanide derivative of the fully reduced enzyme contains both haem a and a(3) in the low-spin ferrous form. The m.c.d. spectra of the fully oxidized derivatives are consistent with the presence of one low-spin ferric haem group, assigned to a, which remains unaltered in the presence of ligands. Haem a(3) is high spin in the resting enzyme and the fluoride derivatives, and low spin in the cyanide form. The partially reduced formate and cyanide derivatives have temperature-dependent m.c.d. spectra due to the presence of high- and low-spin haem a(3) (3+) respectively. Haem a is low-spin ferrous in both. A comparison of the magnitude of the temperature-dependence of haem a(3) (3+) in the fully oxidized and partially reduced forms shows a marked difference which is tentatively ascribed to the presence of anti-ferromagnetic coupling in the fully oxidized form of the enzyme, and to its absence from the partially reduced derivatives, owing to the reduction of both Cu(2+) ions.  相似文献   

20.
The absorptivity at 540 nm of bovine hemiglobincyanide (cyanmethemoglobin) was determined on the basis of the iron content and found to be equal to the established value for human hemiglobincyanide (11.0 L · mmol−1 · cm−1). On this basis the absorption spectra of the common derivatives were determined for bovine hemoglobin. There proved to be only slight differences in the oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, and carboxyhemoglobin spectra between bovine and human hemoglobin. For comparison of the methemoglobin spectra a new series of measurements was made for human hemoglobin. As also found in the rat, the methemoglobin spectrum of bovine blood differed considerably from that in the human. These differences should be taken into account in multicomponent analysis.  相似文献   

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