首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
The magnetic relaxation dispersion profiles for formate, acetate, and water protons are reported for aqueous solutions of hemoglobin singly and doubly labeled with a nitroxide and mercury(II) ion at cysteines at beta-93. Using two spin labels, one nuclear and one electron spin, a long intramolecular vector is defined between the two beta-93 positions in the protein. The paramagnetic contributions to the observed 1H spin-lattice relaxation rate constant are isolated from the magnetic relaxation dispersion profiles obtained on a dual-magnet apparatus that provides spectral density functions characterizing fluctuations sensed by intermoment dipolar interactions in the time range from the tens of microseconds to approximately 1 ps. Both formate and acetate ions are found to bind specifically within 5 angstroms of the beta-93 spin-label position and the relaxation dispersion has inflection points corresponding to correlation times of 30 ps and 4 ns for both ions. The 4-ns motion is identified with exchange of the anions from the site, whereas the 30-ps correlation time is identified with relative motions of the spin label and the bound anion in the protein environment close to beta-93. The magnetic field dependence of the paramagnetic contributions in both cases is well described by a simple Lorentzian spectral density function; no peaks in the spectral density function are observed. Therefore, the high frequency motions of the protein monitored by the intramolecular vector defined by the electron and nuclear spin are well characterized by a stationary random function of time. Attempts to examine long vector fluctuations by employing electron spin and nuclear spin double-labeling techniques did not yield unambiguous characterization of the high frequency motions of the vector between beta-93 positions on different chains.  相似文献   

2.
Spin-labeled pig heart cytochromes c singly modified at Met-65, Tyr-74 and at one of the lysine residues, Lys-72 or Lys-73, were investigated by the ESR method under conditions of different ligand and redox states of the heme and at various pH values. Replacement of Met-80 by the external ligand, cyanide, was shown to produce a sharp increase in the mobility of all the three bound labels while reduction of the spin-labeled ferricytochromes c did not cause any marked changes in their ESR spectra. In the pH range 6-13, two conformational transitions in ferricytochrome c were observed which preceded its alkaline denaturation: the first with pK 9.3 registered by the spin label at the Met-65 position, and the second with pK 11.1 registered by the labels bound to Tyr-74 and Lys-72(73). The conformational changes in the 'left-hand part' of ferricytochrome c are most probably induced in both cases by the exchange of internal protein ligands at the sixth coordination site of the heme.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of radical pairs of spin-labelled hemoglobin molecules (beta-93 cysteine) in a mixture with unlabelled hemoglobin of concentrations higher than the critical one [(5.7 less than c less than 6.3) mM/sigma per heme] is due to some kind of long-range order characterizing these solutions. Labelled molecules induce pertubation in an unlabelled hemoglobin solution of concentration higher than the critical one. The collective behaviour of unlabelled molecules gives rise to the formation of radical pairs of spin-labelled hemoglobin molecules. Such behaviour is dependent on the ligand bound at the heme iron (carbonmonoxide, oxygen, or water.)  相似文献   

4.
Gaudin CF  Grigg JC  Arrieta AL  Murphy ME 《Biochemistry》2011,50(24):5443-5452
Iron is an essential requirement for life for nearly all organisms. The human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus is able to acquire iron from the heme cofactor of hemoglobin (Hb) released from lysed erythrocytes. IsdB, the predominant Hb receptor of S. aureus, is a cell wall-anchored protein that is composed of two NEAT domains. The N-terminal NEAT domain (IsdB-N1) binds Hb, and the C-terminal NEAT domain (IsdB-N2) relays heme to IsdA for transport into the cell. Here we present the 1.45 ? resolution X-ray crystal structure of the IsdB-N2-heme complex. While the structure largely conforms to the eight-strand β-sandwich fold seen in other NEAT domains such as IsdA-N and uses a conserved Tyr residue to coordinate heme-iron, a Met residue is also involved in iron coordination, resulting in a novel Tyr-Met hexacoordinate heme-iron state. The kinetics of the transfer of heme from IsdB-N2 to IsdA-N can be modeled as a two-step process. The rate of transfer of heme between the isolated NEAT domains (82 s(-1)) was found to be similar to that measured for the full-length proteins. Replacing the iron coordinating Met with Leu did not abrogate high-affinity heme binding but did reduce the heme transfer rate constant by more than half. This unusual Met-Tyr heme coordination may also bestow properties on IsdB that help it to bind heme in different oxidation states or extract heme from hemoglobin.  相似文献   

5.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to observe changes in the iron-ligand stretching frequency in photoproduct spectra of the proximal cavity mutant of myoglobin H93G. The measurements compare the deoxy ferrous state of the heme iron in H93G(L), where L is an exogenous imidazole ligand bound in the proximal cavity, to the photolyzed intermediate of H93G(L)*CO at 8 ns. There are significant differences in the frequencies of the iron-ligand axial out-of-plane mode nu(Fe-L) in the photoproduct spectra depending on the nature of L for a series of methyl-substituted imidazoles. Further comparison was made with the proximal cavity mutant of myoglobin in the absence of exogenous ligand (H93G) and the photoproduct of the carbonmonoxy adduct of H93G (H93G-*CO). For this case, it has been shown that H2O is the axial (fifth) ligand to the heme iron in the deoxy form of H93G. The photoproduct of H93G-*CO is consistent with a transiently bound ligand proposed to be a histidine. The data presented here further substantiate the conclusion that a conformationally driven ligand switch exists in photolyzed H93G-*CO. The results suggest that ligand conformational changes in response to dynamic motions of the globin on the nanosecond and longer time scales are a general feature of the H93G proximal cavity mutant.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The O2 and CO Bohr effects of monomeric and dimeric hemoglobins of the insect Chironomus thummi thummi were determined as proton releases upon ligation. For the O2 Bohr effect of the monomeric hemoglobin III a maximum value of 0.20 H+/heme was obtained at pH 7.5. Upon ligation with CO, however, only 0.04 H+/heme were released at the same pH. In agreement with this finding isoelectric focusing experiments revealed different isoelectric points for O2-liganded and CO-liganded states of hemoglobin III. Analogous results were obtained in the cases of the monomeric hemoglobin IV and the dimeric hemoglobins of Chironomus thummi thummi; here O2 Bohr effects of 0.43 and 0.86 H+/heme were observed. For the corresponding CO Bohr effects values of 0.08 and 0.31 H+/heme were obtained respectively. On the basis of the available structural data the reduced CO Bohr effect in hemoglobin III is discussed as arising from a steric hindrance of the CO ligand by the side chain of isoleucine-E11, obstructing the movement of the heme-iron upon reaction with carbon monoxide. It should, however, be noted that ligands, according to their different electron donor and acceptor properties, may generally induce different conformational changes and thus different Bohr effects, in those hemoglobins in which distinct tertiary and/or quaternary constraints have not evolved. The general utilization of CO instead of O2 as allosteric effector is ruled out by the results reported here.  相似文献   

8.
The reductive debromination of BrCCl3 by ferrous deoxymyoglobin leads to the covalent bonding of the prosthetic heme to the protein. We have previously shown, by the use of peptide mapping and mass spectrometry, that histidine residue 93 is covalently bound to the heme moiety. In the present study the structure of the heme adduct was more completely determined by 1H and 13C NMR techniques. We have found that the ring I vinyl group of the prosthetic heme was altered by the addition of a histidine imidazole nitrogen to the alpha-carbon and a CCl2 moiety to the beta-carbon. The electronic absorption spectra of the oxidized and reduced states of the altered heme-protein indicated that the heme-iron exists in a bis-histidine-ligated form. Analysis of the crystal structure of native myoglobin suggested that for the altered heme-protein, histidine residues 97 and 64 are ligated to the heme-iron and that residue 97 has replaced the native proximal histidine residue 93. These movements, in effect a "histidine shuffle" at the active site, may be responsible for the enhanced reducing activity of the altered protein.  相似文献   

9.
The location of the various copper binding sites for horse and human hemoglobin was probed using spin labels attached to the beta-93 cysteine residue. Dipole-dipole interactions between the spin label and bound copper produce a decrease in the amplitude of the spin label spectrum which was used to estimate the Cu(II) spin label distance. By comparing the results with horse and human hemoglobin at 298 and 77 K four different Cu(II) binding sites were identified. The low affinity horse hemoglobin site with the sulfhydryl blocked (site 1) was found to be located 10-13 A from the sulfhydryl spin label on the surface of the molecule. Only with a free sulfhydryl is the site (site 2) in the pocket between the F and H helices closer to the SH-group and the iron populated. It is site 2 which is responsible for the oxidation. In frozen solutions a Cu-nitroxide distance of about 17 A was determined with human hemoglobin. This distance is consistent with the previously postulated location of the "high affinity" human hemoglobin site near the amino terminus of the beta-chain. At 298 K a much shorter Cu-nitroxide distance of about 7 A was calculated for human hemoglobin. This shorter distance at higher temperature also correlated with a slightly smaller value of g11 and A11 for the Cu(II) ESR spectrum. It is postulated that in solution cross-linking between nitrogenous ligands in the region of the amino terminus of one beta-chain and the carboxyl terminus of the other beta-chain can explain this shorter distance. This cross-link could involve histidine beta-143, which is one of the ligands thought to be also involved in site 1. Binding to the "high-affinity" site in solution thus stabilizes the "low-affinity" site 2 relative to site 1 explaining the reported interaction between the "high-affinity" and "low-affinity" sites.  相似文献   

10.
Hmu O, a heme degradation enzyme in Corynebacterium diphtheriae, forms a stoichiometric complex with iron protoporphyrin IX and catalyzes the oxygen-dependent conversion of hemin to biliverdin, carbon monoxide, and free iron. Using a multitude of spectroscopic techniques, we have determined the axial ligand coordination of the heme-Hmu O complex. The ferric complex shows a pH-dependent reversible transition between a water-bound hexacoordinate high spin neutral pH form and an alkaline form, having high spin and low spin states, with a pK(a) of 9. (1)H NMR, EPR, and resonance Raman of the heme-Hmu O complex establish that a neutral imidazole of a histidine residue is the proximal ligand of the complex, similar to mammalian heme oxygenase. EPR of the deoxy cobalt porphyrin IX-Hmu O complex confirms this proximal histidine coordination. Oxy cobalt-Hmu O EPR reveals a hydrogen-bonding interaction between the O(2) and an exchangeable proton in the Hmu O distal pocket and two distinct orientations for the bound O(2). Mammalian heme oxygenase has only one O(2) orientation. This difference and the mixed spin states at alkaline pH indicate structural differences in the distal environment between Hmu O and its mammalian counterpart.  相似文献   

11.
In humans, heme iron is the most abundant iron source, and bacterial pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus acquire it for growth. IsdB of S. aureus acquires Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX (heme) from hemoglobin for transfer to IsdC via IsdA. These three cell-wall-anchored Isd (iron-regulated surface determinant) proteins contain conserved NEAT (near iron transport) domains. The purpose of this work was to delineate the mechanism of heme binding and transfer between the NEAT domains of IsdA, IsdB, and IsdC using a combination of structural and spectroscopic studies. X-ray crystal structures of IsdA NEAT domain (IsdA-N1) variants reveal that removing the native heme-iron ligand Tyr166 is compensated for by iron coordination by His83 on the distal side and that no single mutation of distal loop residues is sufficient to perturb the IsdA-heme complex. Also, alternate heme-iron coordination was observed in structures of IsdA-N1 bound to reduced Fe(II)-protoporphyrin IX and Co(III)-protoporphyrin IX. The IsdA-N1 structural data were correlated with heme transfer kinetics from the NEAT domains of IsdB and IsdC. We demonstrated that the NEAT domains transfer heme at rates comparable to full-length proteins. The second-order rate constant for heme transfer from IsdA-N1 was modestly affected (< 2-fold) by the IsdA variants, excluding those at Tyr166. Substituting Tyr166 with Ala or Phe changed the reaction mechanism to one with two observable steps and decreased observed rates > 15-fold (to 100-fold excess IsdC). We propose a heme transfer model wherein NEAT domain complexes pass heme iron directly from an iron-coordinating Tyr of the donor protein to the homologous Tyr residues of the acceptor protein.  相似文献   

12.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy and step-scan Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy have been used to identify the ligation state of ferrous heme iron for the H93G proximal cavity mutant of myoglobin in the absence of exogenous ligand on the proximal side. Preparation of the H93G mutant of myoglobin has been previously reported for a variety of axial ligands to the heme iron (e.g., substituted pyridines and imidazoles) [DePillis, G., Decatur, S. M., Barrick, D., and Boxer, S. G. (1994) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 116, 6981-6982]. The present study examines the ligation states of heme in preparations of the H93G myoglobin with no exogenous ligand. In the deoxy form of H93G, resonance Raman spectroscopic evidence shows water to be the axial (fifth) ligand to the deoxy heme iron. Analysis of the infrared C-O and Raman Fe-C stretching frequencies for the CO adduct indicates that it is six-coordinate with a histidine trans ligand. Following photolysis of CO, a time-dependent change in ligation is evident in both step-scan FTIR and saturation resonance Raman spectra, leading to the conclusion that a conformationally driven ligand switch exists in the H93G protein. In the absence of exogenous nitrogenous ligands, the CO trans effect stabilizes endogenous histidine ligation, while conformational strain favors the dissociation of histidine following photolysis of CO. The replacement of histidine by water in the five-coordinate complex is estimated to occur in < 5 micros. The results demonstrate that the H93G myoglobin cavity mutant has potential utility as a model system for studying the conformational energetics of ligand switching in heme proteins such as those observed in nitrite reductase, guanylyl cyclase, and possibly cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
Oxidation state-dependent conformational changes in cytochrome c.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
High-resolution three-dimensional structural analyses of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c have now been completed in both oxidation states using isomorphous crystalline material and similar structure determination methodologies. This approach has allowed a comprehensive comparison to be made between these structures and the elucidation of the subtle conformational changes occurring between oxidation states. The structure solution of reduced yeast iso-1-cytochrome c has been published and the determination of the oxidized protein and a comparison of these structures are reported herein. Our data show that oxidation state-dependent changes are expressed for the most part in terms of adjustments to heme structure, movement of internally bound water molecules and segmental thermal parameter changes along the polypeptide chain, rather than as explicit polypeptide chain positional shifts, which are found to be minimal. This result is emphasized by the retention of all main-chain to main-chain hydrogen bond interactions in both oxidation states. Observed thermal factor changes primarily affect four segments of polypeptide chain. Residues 37-39 show less mobility in the oxidized state, with Arg38 and its side-chain being most affected. In contrast, residues 47-59, 65-72 and 81-85 have significantly higher thermal factors, with maximal increases being observed for Asn52, Tyr67 and Phe82. The side-chains of two of these residues are hydrogen bonded to the internally bound water molecule, Wat166, which shows a large 1.7 A displacement towards the positively charged heme iron atom in the oxidized protein. Further analyses suggest that Wat166 is a major factor in stabilizing both oxidation states of the heme through differential orientation of dipole moment, shift in distance to the heme iron atom and alterations in the surrounding hydrogen bonding network. It also seems likely that Wat166 movement leads to the disruption of the hydrogen bond from the side-chain of Tyr67 to the Met80 heme ligand, thereby further stabilizing the positively charged heme iron atom in oxidized cytochrome c. In total, there appear to be three regions about which oxidation state-dependent structural changes are focussed. These include the pyrrole ring A propionate group, Wat166 and the Met80 heme ligand. All three of these foci are linked together by a network of intermediary interactions and are localized to the Met80 ligand side of the heme group. Associated with each is a corresponding nearby segment of polypeptide chain having a substantially higher mobility in the oxidized protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Human hemoglobin was spin labeled with 4-isothiocanato-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-piperdinooxyl, which is known to bind specifically to the N-terminal alpha-amino groups of proteins and slightly to the reactive sulfhydryl groups. Electron spin resonance (ESR) analysis indicated a partially resolved five-line spectrum, suggesting that the label was attached to at least two different binding sites. Using specific blocking reagents prior to spin labeling, the two binding sites were attributed to the sulfhydryl group of beta-93 (immobile) and the alpha-amino group of the N-terminal valines (mobile). The relative motion of the spin at one set of binding sites was restricted regardless of the state of ligation and pH, while the motion at the other site showed dependence on those parameters, e.g. the spin-labeled N-terminal ends of deoxyhemoglobin have restricted motion at all pH ranges studied, while those of oxyhemoglobin are relatively free to move at the basic pH range, but become more restricted in the acidic pH range.  相似文献   

15.
Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase is a heme enzyme that catalyzes the oxidative degradation of L-Trp and other indoleamines. We have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to characterize the heme environment of purified recombinant human indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (hIDO). In the absence of L-Trp, the spectrum of the Fe(3+) form displayed six-coordinate, mixed high and low spin character. Addition of L-Trp triggered a transition to predominantly low spin with two Fe-OH(-) stretching modes identified at 546 and 496 cm(-1), suggesting H-bonding between the NH group of the pyrrole ring of L-Trp and heme-bound OH(-). The distal pocket of Fe(3+) hIDO was explored further by an exogenous heme ligand, CN(-); again, binding of L-Trp introduced strong H-bonding and/or steric interactions to the heme-bound CN(-). On the other hand, the spectrum of Fe(2+) hIDO revealed a five-coordinate and high spin heme with or without L-Trp bound. The proximal Fe-His stretching mode, identified at 236 cm(-1), did not shift upon L-Trp addition, indicating that the proximal Fe-His bond strength is not affected by binding of the substrate. The high Fe-His stretching frequency suggests that Fe(2+) hIDO has a strong "peroxidase-like" Fe-His bond. Using CO as a structural probe for the distal environment of Fe(2+) hIDO revealed that binding of L-Trp in the distal pocket converted IDO to a peroxidase-like enzyme. Binding of L-Trp also caused conformational changes to the heme vinyl groups, which were independent of changes of the spin and coordination state of the heme iron. Together these data indicate that the strong proximal Fe-His bond and the strong H-bonding and/or steric interactions between l-Trp and dioxygen in the distal pocket are likely crucial for the enzymatic activity of hIDO.  相似文献   

16.
The pH and temperature dependences of the 270-MHz proton nuclear magnetic resonance and resonance Raman spectra of Thermus thermophilus cytochrome c-552 were studied. Observation of the NMR methyl signal of the iron-bound methionine indicates that a methionine residue is the sixth ligand of heme iron in both ferric and ferrous states, although the environment of this methionine is not similar to that in mitochondrial cytochrome c. The NMR methyl signal of the coordinated methionine in the ferrous state was observed even at 87 degrees C, indicating the retention of the methionine ligand at the sixth coordination position. None of resonance Raman lines in ferrous cytochrome c-552 at higher temperatures showed a prominant temperature-dependent frequency shift, which implies that the heme iron was still bound with strong ligands and retained the low-spin state. In either redox state overall thermal denaturation did not occur even at 87 degrees C, although the ferric form existed in thermal spin mixture of the low-spin and high-spin species at higher temperatures. The hyperfine-shifted NMR resonances of the ferric form indicated rapid exchange of the sixth ligand at alkaline pH in the process of a single-step alkaline isomerization.  相似文献   

17.
R C Williams  H Kim 《Biochemistry》1976,15(10):2207-2211
Dimer-tetramer association constants (K2,4) of derivatives of CO-hemoglobins A and S specifically carbamoylated at the NH2-terminal valine residues were measured. Reactivites of the beta-93 sulfhydryls of the hemoglobin A derivatives were also investigated. As compared with the association constants of the parent molecules, the values of K2,4 of both hemoglobin types are raised by carbamoylation of the alpha-chain NH2 terminus, lowered by carbamoylation of the beta-chain NH2 terminus, and raised by carbamoylation of both termini. The apparent second-order rate constant for reaction of p-mercuribenzoate (PMB) with the beta-93 sulfhydryls is, however, unchanged by carbamoylation. These two observations are interpreted to indicate that in the liganded molecule structural changes are produced at the interface between dimers but not in the region of the beta-93 sulfhydryls. From the combination of the K2,4 measurements with ligand-binding data for the same derivatives (Kilmartin, J. V., et al. (1973), J. Biol. Chem. 248, 4039; Nigen, A. M., et al. (1974), J. Biol. Chem. 249, 6611) the carbamoylation-induced changes in the dimer-tetramer association constants of the unliganded derivatives were estimated to be of magnitude equal to or smaller than those in K2,4. It is concluded that much of the change in oxygen affinity that occurs upon carbamoylation of hemoglobins A and S can be accounted for without invoking extensive structural changes in the unliganded molecule.  相似文献   

18.
We report an optical and EPR spectral study of three hemoglobins, Hb I, II, and III, from the gill of the clam Lucina pectinata. Hemoglobin I reacts much more avidly with hydrogen sulfide than do Hbs II and III. The proximal ligand to the heme iron of each hemoglobin is histidyl imidazole. The acid/alkaline transition of ferric Hb I occurs with pK 9.6; those of ferric Hbs II and III with pK 6.6 and 5.9, respectively. At their acid limits each ferric hemoglobin exists as aquoferric hemoglobin. Broadening of the g = 6 resonance suggests that the bound water enjoys great positional freedom. Ferric Hb I, at the alkaline limit (pH 11), exists as ferric hemoglobin hydroxide. Ferric Hbs II and III, at their alkaline limit (pH 7.5), each exist as equal mixtures of two species. The low spin species with optical maxima near 541 and 576 nm and g values of 2.61, 2.20, and 1.82, are identified as ferric hemoglobin hydroxide. The high spin species, with optical maxima near 486 and 603 nm and g values of 6.71, 5.87, and 5.06, resemble Dicrocoelium hemoglobin and hemoglobin MSaskatoon. Here we show that Hbs II and III resemble hemoglobin MSaskatoon in which a distal tyrosinate oxygen ligated to the ferric heme iron at alkaline pH is displaced by water at acid pH. The H2S product of ferric Hb I is identified as ferric hemoglobin sulfide.  相似文献   

19.
Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance techniques were used to assign resonances corresponding to heme pocket residues of the isolated alpha(CO) subunits of the human adult hemoglobin (HbA). The assignment procedure was based on the partial identification of the amino acid spin system from the J-correlated (COSY) spectrum and on the nuclear Overhauser effect connectivities (from NOSEY spectra) with the heme substituents. We present here partial assignments corresponding to five amino acid residues: Leu86, Leu-91, Val-93, Leu-101 and Leu-136. Starting from the known crystallographic structure of the alpha subunit in the hemoglobin tetramer, we applied a dipolar model to compute the ring-current shift of the protons from fifteen amino acid residues in the heme pocket. Comparison of the predicted and observed chemical shifts suggests that there is a very close similarity between the heme pocket tertiary structure of the alpha(CO) subunits in crystals of HbA(CO) and of the free alpha(CO) chains. The one-dimensional NMR spectra were used to monitor the pH-induced structural changes, the effects of chemical modification and of ligand substitution. Upon increasing the pH from 5.6 to 9.0 the structure of the heme environment appears to be invariant with the exception of some residues in the CD corner. The structure is also largely conserved when p-chloromercuribenzoate is bound to Cys-104. In contrast, the substitution of CO by O2 as ligand induces many large changes in the heme cavity which can be partially characterized by NMR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

20.
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   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号