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1.
A proton nuclear magnetic resonance study of the reaction of apohemoglobin A with both oxidized and reduced hemes reveals that at least two slowly interconverting species are initially formed, only one of which corresponds to the native proteins. Reconstitutions with isotope-labeled hemes reveal that the hyperfine-shift patterns for heme resonances in the metazido derivatives differ for the two species by interchange of heme environment characteristic of heme orientational disorder about the alpha, gamma-meso axis, as previously demonstrated for myoglobin [La Mar, G. N., Davis, N. L., Parish, D. W., & Smith, K. M. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 168, 887-896]. Careful scrutiny of the 1H NMR spectrum of freshly prepared hemoglobin A (Hb A) reveals that characteristic resonances for the alternate heme orientation are present in both subunits, clearly demonstrating that "native" Hb A possesses an important structure heterogeneity. It is observed that this heterogeneity disappears with time for one subunit but remains unchanged in the other. This implies that a metastable disordered state in vivo involves the alpha subunit and an equilibrium disordered state both in vivo and in vitro is involved within the beta subunit. The presence of metastable disorder in fresh blood suggests an in vivo hemoglobin assembly from apoprotein and heme that is similar to the in vitro reconstitution process. The slow equilibration and known lifetimes for erythrocytes provide a rationalization for the presence of detectable metastable states. The implications of such heme disorder for Hb function are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of carp hemoglobin (Hb) in the unligated deoxy and ligated met-cyano and met-azido forms have been recorded as a function of pH and upon addition of inositol hexaphosphate. All protein derivatives yield spectra that are consistent with appreciable molecular heterogeneity in the heme cavity. The pattern of heme methyl hyperfine shifts in carp met-cyano Hb indicates that this heterogeneity arises from the presence of heme rotational disorder, as found in native myoglobin. In carp deoxy Hb, the T----R transition manifests itself in nuclear magnetic resonance spectral changes similar to those found in modified human Hb species; namely, a decrease in heme methyl and an increase in proximal histidyl imidazole ring NH hyperfine shifts indicative of a strengthening of the iron-histidine bond. The met-cyano complex exhibits heme methyl hyperfine shifts similar to the analogous R state complex of Hb A; addition of inositol hexaphosphate did not give evidence for a quaternary structural change. Carp met-azido Hb in the R state also closely resembles the electronic structure of the HbA complex. Addition of inositol hexaphosphate appeared to effect at least a partial conversion to a T state with larger high-spin content than that observed for T state human metHbN3.  相似文献   

3.
Specific heme protons for the majority of resonances in the downfield resolved region of equine met-azido myoglobin have been assigned using solely the two-dimensional 1H NMR experiments NOESY and COSY. Metazido myoglobin provides a useful test case for the applicability of these techniques to paramagnetic proteins for the following reasons. First met-azido myoglobin is a mixed spin-state protein, with significantly shorter relaxation times and broadened lines relative to pure low-spin systems (eg., met-cyano myoglobin). Second, met-azido hemoglobin and met-azido myoglobin are important as models for the physiological forms of hemoglobin. Third, a few sperm whale met-azido myoglobin resonances have been previously assigned, which permits a comparison of assignments for these similar proteins, and a check of the method presented here.  相似文献   

4.
Native human adult hemoglobin (Hb A) has mostly normal orientation of heme, whereas recombinant Hb A (rHb A) expressed in E. coli contains both normal and reversed orientations of heme. Hb A with the normal heme exhibits positive circular dichroism (CD) bands at both the Soret and 260‐nm regions, while rHb A with the reversed heme shows a negative Soret and decreased 260‐nm CD bands. In order to examine involvement of the proximal histidine (His F8) of either α or β subunits in determining the heme orientation, we prepared two cavity mutant Hbs, rHb(αH87G) and rHb(βH92G), with substitution of glycine for His F8 in the presence of imidazole. CD spectra of both cavity mutant Hbs did not show a negative Soret band, but instead exhibited positive bands with strong intensity at the both Soret and 260‐nm regions, suggesting that the reversed heme scarcely exists in the cavity mutant Hbs. We confirmed by 1H NMR and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies that the cavity mutant Hbs have mainly the normal heme orientation in both the mutated and native subunits. These results indicate that the heme Fe‐His F8 linkage in both α and β subunits influences the heme orientation, and that the heme orientation of one type of subunit is related to the heme orientation of the complementary subunits to be the same. The present study showed that CD and RR spectroscopies also provided powerful tools for the examination of the heme rotational disorder of Hb A, in addition to the usual 1H NMR technique. Chirality 28:585–592, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
A ring fluorinated heme, 13,17-bis(2-carboxylatoethyl)-3,8-diethyl-2-fluoro-7,12,18-trimethyl-porphyrinatoiron(III), has been incorporated into human adult hemoglobin (Hb A). The heme orientational disorder in the individual subunits of the protein has been readily characterized using (19)F NMR and the O(2) binding properties of the protein have been evaluated through the oxygen equilibrium analysis. The equilibrated orientations of hemes in alpha- and beta- subunits of the reconstituted protein were found to be almost completely opposite to each other, and hence were largely different from those of the native and the previously reported reconstituted proteins [T. Jue, G.N. La Mar, Heme orientational heterogeneity in deuterohemin-reconstituted horse and human hemoglobin characterized by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 119 (1984) 640-645]. Despite the large difference in the degree of the heme orientational disorder in the subunits of the proteins, the O(2) affinity and the cooperativity of the protein reconstituted with 2-MF were similar to those of the proteins reconstituted with a series of hemes chemically modified at the heme 3- and 8-positions [K. Kawabe, K. Imaizumi, Z. Yoshida, K. Imai, I. Tyuma, Studies on reconstituted myoglobins and hemoglobins II. Role of the heme side chains in the oxygenation of hemoglobin, J. Biochem. 92 (1982) 1713-1722], whose O(2) affinity and cooperativity were higher and lower, respectively, relative to those of native protein. These results indicated that the heme orientational disorder could exert little effect, if any, on the O(2) affinity properties of Hb A. This finding provides new insights into structure-function relationship of Hb A.  相似文献   

6.
T Jue  G N La Mar  K Han    Y Yamamoto 《Biophysical journal》1984,46(1):117-120
1H NMR spectroscopy has been used to measure the proximal histidyl labile ring proton (NH) rates of exchange with bulk solvent in the individual subunits of hemoglobin (Hb) A. These protons displayed a substantial decrease in their exchange rates in comparison with related monomeric proteins and exhibited sensitivity to the quarternary state. With the beta subunit NH, the exchange behaviour was similar to an allosterically responsive subset of protons, which have been identified using 1H-3H methods (Englander, J.J., R. Rogero, and S. W. Englander, 1983, J. Mol. Biol. 169:325-344). Assuming similar exchange mechanisms for the two subunits, the NMR data suggested a more flexible alpha than beta subunit in Hb A.  相似文献   

7.
Cytochrome b5 reconstituted with specifically deuterated hemins has led to the assignment of the resolved 6,7 beta-propionate protons and heme meso protons. Freshly reconstituted cytochrome b5 contains a mixture of two isomers in an approx. 1:1 ratio. As time proceeds the minor isomer decreases in intensity until the equilibrium ratio, approx. 8:1, of the two isomers is reached. The rate of the heme disorder kinetics was investigated for cytochrome b5 as a function of pH, oxidation state and 2,4 heme substitutents. Comparison of the kinetic data for cytochrome b5 with that obtained for other b-type heme proteins supports the proposal that the heme disorder arises from a 180 degree rotation of the heme about the alpha, gamma-meso axis. Computer-difference methods allow the spectra of the two individual isomers to be generated. Comparison of the NMR spectral parameters for the two individual isomers indicates small structural differences for amino acid side-chain orientations.  相似文献   

8.
In our previous work, we demonstrated that the replacement of the "heme binding module," a segment from F1 to G5 site, in myoglobin with that of hemoglobin alpha-subunit converted the heme proximal structure of myoglobin into the alpha-subunit type (Inaba, K., Ishimori, K. and Morishima, I. (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 283, 311-327). To further examine the structural regulation by the heme binding module in hemoglobin, we synthesized the betaalpha(HBM)-subunit, in which the heme binding module (HBM) of hemoglobin beta-subunit was replaced by that of hemoglobin alpha-subunit. Based on the gel chromatography, the betaalpha(HBM)-subunit was preferentially associated with the alpha-subunit to form a heterotetramer, alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)], just as is native beta-subunit. Deoxy-alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)] tetramer exhibited the hyperfine-shifted NMR resonance from the proximal histidyl N(delta)H proton and the resonance Raman band from the Fe-His vibrational mode at the same positions as native hemoglobin. Also, NMR spectra of carbonmonoxy and cyanomet alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)] tetramer were quite similar to those of native hemoglobin. Consequently, the heme environmental structure of the betaalpha(HBM)-subunit in tetrameric alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)] was similar to that of the beta-subunit in native tetrameric Hb A, and the structural conversion by the module substitution was not clear in the hemoglobin subunits. The contrastive structural effects of the module substitution on myoglobin and hemoglobin subunits strongly suggest different regulation mechanisms of the heme proximal structure between these two globins. Whereas the heme proximal structure of monomeric myoglobin is simply determined by the amino acid sequence of the heme binding module, that of tetrameric hemoglobin appears to be closely coupled to the subunit interactions.  相似文献   

9.
K Ishimori  I Morishima 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4892-4898
The effect of heme modification on the tertiary and quaternary structures of hemoglobins was examined by utilizing the NMR spectra of the reconstituted [mesohemoglobin (mesoHb), deuterohemoglobin (deuteroHb)] and hybrid heme (meso-proto, deutero-proto) hemoglobins (Hbs). The heme peripheral modification resulted in the preferential downfield shift of the proximal histidine N1H signal for the beta subunit, indicating nonequivalence of the structural change induced by the heme modification in the alpha and beta subunits of Hb. In the reconstituted and hybrid heme Hbs, the exchangeable proton resonances due to the intra- and intersubunit hydrogen bonds, which have been used as the oxy and deoxy quaternary structural probes, were shifted by 0.2-0.3 ppm from that of native Hb upon the beta-heme substitution. This suggests that, in the fully deoxygenated form, the quaternary structure of the reconstituted Hbs is in an "imperfect" T state in which the hydrogen bonds located at the subunit interface are slightly distorted by the conformational change of the beta subunit. Moreover, the two heme orientations are found in the alpha subunit of deuteroHb, but not in the beta subunit of deuteroHb, and in both the alpha and beta subunits of mesoHb. The tertiary and quaternary structural changes in the Hb molecule induced by the heme peripheral modification were also discussed in relation to their functional properties.  相似文献   

10.
The truncated hemoglobin (Hb) from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is a bis-histidyl hexacoordinate complex in the absence of exogenous ligands. This protein can form a covalent cross-link between His117 in the H-helix and the heme 2-vinyl group. Cross-linking, the physiological importance of which has not been established, is avoided with the His117Ala substitution. In the present work, H117A Hb was used to explore exogenous ligand binding to the heme group. NMR and thermal denaturation data showed that the replacement was of little consequence to the structural and thermodynamic properties of ferric Synechocystis Hb. It did, however, decelerate the association of cyanide ions with the heme iron. Full complexation required hours, instead of minutes, of incubation at optical and NMR concentrations. At neutral pH and in the presence of excess cyanide, binding occurred with a first-order dependence on cyanide concentration, eliminating distal histidine decoordination as the rate-limiting step. The cyanide complex of the H117A variant was characterized for the conformational changes occurring as the histidine on the distal side, His46 (E10), was displaced. Extensive rearrangement allowed Tyr22 (B10) to insert in the heme pocket and Gln43 (E7) and Gln47 (E11) to come in contact with it. H-bond formation to the bound cyanide was identified in solution with the use of (1)H(2)O/(2)H(2)O mixtures. Cyanide binding also resulted in a change in the ratio of heme orientational isomers, in a likely manifestation of heme environment reshaping. Similar observations were made with the related Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 H117A Hb, except that cyanide binding was rapid in this protein. In both cases, the (15)N chemical shift of bound cyanide was reminiscent of that in peroxidases and the orientation of the proximal histidine was as in other truncated Hbs. The ensemble of the data provided insight into the structural cooperativity of the heme pocket scaffold and pointed to the reactive 117 site of Synechocystis Hb as a potential determinant of biophysical and, perhaps, functional properties.  相似文献   

11.
The gene coding for the water-soluble domain of the outer mitochondrial membrane cytochrome b5 (OM cytochrome b5) from rat liver has been synthetized and expressed in Escherichia coli. The DNA sequence was obtained by back-translating the known amino acid sequence [Lederer, F., Ghrir, R., Guiard, B., Cortial, S., & Ito, A. (1983) Eur. J. Biochem. 132, 95-102]. The recombinant OM cytochrome b5 was characterized by UV-visible, EPR, and 1H NMR spectroscopy. The UV-visible and EPR spectra of the OM cytochrome b5 are almost identical to the ones obtained from the overexpressed rat microsomal cytochrome b5 [Bodman, S. B. V., Schyler, M. A., Jollie, D. R., & Sligar, S. G. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 9443-9447]. The one-dimensional 1H NMR spectrum of the OM cytochrome b5 indicates that the rhombic perturbation of the ferric center is essentially identical to that in the microsomal beef, rabbit, chicken, and rat cytochromes b5. Two-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy (NOESY) and one-dimensional NOE difference spectroscopy were used to assign the contact-shifted resonances that correspond to each of the two isomers that result from the rotation of the heme around its alpha-gamma-meso axis. The assignment of the resonances allowed the determination of the heme orientation ratio in the OM cytochrome b5, which was found to be 1.0 +/- 0.1. It is noteworthy that the two cytochromes b5 that have similar populations of the two heme isomers (large heme disorder) originate from the rat liver.  相似文献   

12.
The heme molecular structure of the met-azido form of the myoglobin from the shark Galeorhinus japonicus has been investigated by 1H NMR. A nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) was clearly observed among the heme peripheral side-chain proton signals of this complex, which undergoes thermal spin equilibrium between high-spin (S = 5/2) and low-spin (S = 1/2) states, and the NOE connectivities provided the assignment of the resonances from the heme C13(1)H2 and C17(1)H2 protons. Chemical shift inequivalence of these proton resonances not only provided information about the orientation of these methylene protons with respect to the heme plane, but also allowed characterization of the time-dependent build-up of the NOE between them, which yields the correlation time for the internal motion of the inter-proton vector. The relatively large mobility found for the C17(1)H2 group suggests that the carboxyl oxygen of the heme C17 propionate is not anchored to the apo-protein by a salt bridge. It has been shown that the ferric high-spin form of G. japonicus Mb possesses a penta-coordinated heme [Suzuki, T. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 914, 170-176; Yamamoto, Y., Osawa, A., Inoue, Y., Ch?j?, R. & Suzuki, T. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 192, 225-229] and that the conformation of both heme propionate groups is fixed with respect to the heme, as well as the apo-protein, by a salt bridge [Yamamoto, Y., Inoue, Y., Ch?j?, R. & Suzuki, T. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 189, 567-573]. Therefore the weakening or interruption of the interaction between the C17 propionate and His FG3 upon the changes of the coordination and spin state of the heme iron, during azide ion binding to ferric high-spin G. japonicus Mb, is attributed to the displacement of the FG corner of the apoprotein away from the heme C17 propionate group. A similar structural alteration has been revealed by X-ray structural analyses of unliganded and liganded forms of ferrous hemoproteins [Baldwin, J. & Chothia, C. (1979) J. Mol. Biol. 129, 175-220; Phillips, S.E.V. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 142, 531-554].  相似文献   

13.
In the accompanying paper [Ferraiolo, B. L., Onady, G. M., & Mieyal, J. J. (1984) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)] we reported different aniline hydroxylase activities for ferrihemoglobin, its isolated subunits, and the converse pair of valency hybrids alpha 3+2(beta 2+-CO)2 and (alpha 2+-CO)2 beta 3+2 in a reconstituted system containing reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) and cytochrome P-450 reductase. To investigate the molecular basis for the different activities, 1H NMR T1 relaxation studies of aniline were performed in the absence and presence of each of the hemoglobin (Hb) species. The paramagnetic contribution of the ferric heme iron atoms of each Hb derivative to the enhanced relaxation of the proton nuclei of aniline was determined relative to control experiments in which the hemoproteins had been converted fully to the corresponding (carbonmonoxy)ferrous forms, which are diamagnetic. According to the known distance dependence of the paramagnetic effect and the relative changes in T1 for the upfield and downfield signals in the spectrum of aniline, it was ascertained that aniline binds in the same manner to the beta-ferric hybrid and to ferrihemoglobin. These two forms displayed equivalent hydroxylase activities that were the highest among the Hb derivatives for the same aniline concentration. The T1 changes observed with the alpha-ferric hybrid suggest a different orientation for aniline in that complex. The T1 data for the isolated subunits alpha 3+ and beta 3+4 would indicate that overall binding of aniline includes a component of direct aniline-heme ligation in each case.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We found that recombinant human adult hemoglobin (rHb A) expressed in Escherichia coli showed heterogeneity of components with the intensity of a positive CD band at 260 nm and that it could be resolved into three components (SP-1, SP-2, and SP-3) by SP-Sepharose column chromatography. 1H NMR revealed that SP-1 is identical with native Hb A, while SP-2 and SP-3 largely contain the reversed heme isomer in both the alpha and beta subunits, with contents of approximately 50 and >80% in SP-2 and SP-3, respectively. Rotation of the heme 180 degrees about the 5,15-meso axis (reversed heme) causes an interexchange of the methyl groups at positions 2 and 7 with the vinyl groups at positions 8 and 3, respectively. To examine the effect of the modification of the heme-protein contact on the structure and function of Hb A, we compared the 1H NMR, CD, and oxygen binding properties of the three components with those of native Hb A. Native Hb A exhibits a distinct positive CD band in both the near-UV and Soret regions, but rHb A with reversed heme exhibits a very weak positive CD band at 260 nm and a prominent negative CD band in the Soret region. Cooperativity, as measured by Hill's n value, decreased from 3.18 (SP-1) to 2.94 (SP-2) to 2.63 (SP-3) with an increase in the reversed heme orientation. The effect of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate (IHP), on the oxygen binding properties was also reduced in rHb A with reversed heme. These results indicate that changes in the heme-globin contact exert a discernible influence on CD spectra and cooperative oxygen binding.  相似文献   

15.
The triple mutant of the solubilized, 265-residue construct of human heme oxygenase, K18E/E29K/R183E-hHO, has been shown to redirect the exclusive alpha-regioselectivity of wild-type hHO to primarily beta,delta-selectivity in the cleavage of heme (Wang, J., Evans, J. P., Ogura, H., La Mar, G. N., and Ortiz de Montellano, P. R. (2006) Biochemistry 45, 61-73). The 1H NMR hyperfine shift pattern for the substrate and axial His CbetaH's and the substrate-protein contacts of the cyanide-inhibited protohemin and 2,4-dimethyldeuterohemin complexes of the triple mutant have been analyzed in detail and compared to data for the WT complex. It is shown that protein contacts for the major solution isomers for both substrates in the mutant dictate approximately 90 degrees in-plane clockwise rotation relative to that in the WT. The conventional interpretation of the pattern of substrate methyl hyperfine shifts, however, indicates substrate rotations of only approximately 50 degrees . This paradox is resolved by demonstrating that the axial His25 imidazole ring also rotates counterclockwise with respect to the protein matrix in the mutant relative to that in the WT. The axial His25 CbetaH hyperfine shifts are shown to serve as independent probes of the imidazole plane orientation relative to the protein matrix. The analysis indicates that the pattern of heme methyl hyperfine shifts cannot be used alone to determine the in-plane orientation of the substrate as it relates to the stereospecificity of heme cleavage, without explicit consideration of the orientation of the axial His imidazole plane relative to the protein matrix.  相似文献   

16.
K Ishimori  I Morishima 《Biochemistry》1988,27(11):4060-4066
Diruthenium-substituted Ru-Fe hybrid hemoglobins (Hb) were synthesized by heme substitution from protoheme to ruthenium (II) carbonyldeuteroporphyrin in the alpha or beta subunits. As the carbon monoxide coordinated to ruthenium (II) is not released under physiological conditions, deoxygenated Ru-Fe hybrid derivatives [alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ru-CO)2 and alpha(Ru-CO)2 beta(Fe)2] can serve as models for half-liganded Hbs. On the basis of proton NMR spectra of hyperfine-shifted proton resonances, these Ru-Fe hybrid Hbs have only small structural changes in the heme environment of the partner subunits at low pH. The proton NMR spectra of the intersubunit hydrogen-bonded protons also showed that the quaternary structures of the two complementary hybrids both remain in the "T-like state" at low pH, suggesting that the T to R structural conversion is induced by ligation of the third ligand molecule. Marked conformational changes in the heme vicinity are observed at high pH only for alpha(Ru-CO)2 beta(Fe)2, and its quaternary structure is converted into the "R state"; the alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ru-CO)2 hybrid does not undergo this change. This implies that the free-energy difference between the two quaternary states is smaller in the alpha-liganded hybrid than in the beta-liganded one.  相似文献   

17.
Significant reduction in oxygen affinity resulting from interactions between heterotropic allosteric effectors and hemoglobin in not only the unligated derivative but also the fully ligated form has been reported (Tsuneshige, A., Park, S. I., and Yonetani, T. (2002) Biophys. Chem. 98, 49-63; Yonetani, T., Park, S. I., Tsuneshige, A., Imai, K., and Kanaori, K. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 34508-34520). To further investigate this effect in more detail, alpha- and beta-semihemoglobins, namely, alpha(heme)beta(apo) and alpha(apo)beta(heme), respectively, were prepared and characterized with respect to the impact of allosteric effectors on both conformation and ligand binding properties. Semihemoglobins are dimers characterized by a high affinity for oxygen and lack of cooperativity. We found that, compared with stripped conditions, semihemoglobins responded to effectors (inositol hexaphosphate and L35) by decreasing the affinity for oxygen by 60- and 130-fold for alpha- and beta-semihemoglobins, respectively. 1H NMR and sedimentation velocity experiments carried out with their ligated and unligated forms in the absence and presence of effectors revealed that semihemoglobins always remain as single-heme-carrying dimers. Recombination kinetics of their photolyzed CO derivatives showed that effectors did indeed interact with their ligated forms. Measurements of the Fe-His stretching mode show that the semihemoglobins undergo a large ligand binding-induced conformational shift and that both ligand-free and ligand derivatives respond to the presence of effectors. Contradictions to the Monod-Wyman-Changeaux/Perutz allosteric model arise since 1) the modulation of ligand affinity is not achieved in semihemoglobins by the formation of a low affinity T conformation (quaternary effect) but by direct interaction with effectors, 2) effectors do interact significantly with ligated forms of high affinity semihemoglobins, and 3) modulation of the ligand affinity and the cooperativity are not necessarily linked but instead can be separated into two distinct phenomena that can be isolated.  相似文献   

18.
Cheng Y  Shen TJ  Simplaceanu V  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2002,41(39):11901-11913
To investigate the roles of beta93 cysteine in human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A), we have constructed four recombinant mutant hemoglobins (rHbs), rHb (betaC93G), rHb (betaC93A), rHb (betaC93M), and rHb (betaC93L), and have prepared two chemically modified Hb As, Hb A-IAA and Hb A-NEM, in which the sulfhydryl group at beta93Cys is modified by sulfhydryl reagents, iodoacetamide (IAA) and N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), respectively. These variants at the beta93 position show higher oxygen affinity, lower cooperativity, and reduced Bohr effect relative to Hb A. The response of some of these Hb variants to allosteric effectors, 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG) and inositol hexaphosphate (IHP), is decreased relative to that of Hb A. The proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of these Hb variants show that there is a marked influence on the proximal heme pocket of the beta-chain, whereas the environment of the proximal heme pocket of the alpha-chain remains unchanged as compared to Hb A, suggesting that higher oxygen affinity is likely to be determined by the heme pocket of the beta-chain rather than by that of the alpha-chain. This is further supported by NO titration of these Hbs in the deoxy form. For Hb A, NO binds preferentially to the heme of the alpha-chain relative to that of the beta-chain. In contrast, the feature of preferential binding to the heme of the alpha-chain becomes weaker and even disappears for Hb variants with modifications at beta93Cys. The effects of IHP on these Hbs in the NO form are different from those on HbNO A, as characterized by (1)H NMR spectra of the T-state markers, the exchangeable resonances at 14 and 11 ppm, reflecting that these Hb variants have more stability in the R-state relative to Hb A, especially rHb (betaC93L) and Hb A-NEM in the NO form. The changes of the C2 proton resonances of the surface histidyl residues in these Hb variants in both the deoxy and CO forms, compared with those of Hb A, indicate that a mutation or chemical modification at beta93Cys can result in conformational changes involving several surface histidyl residues, e.g., beta146His and beta2His. The results obtained here offer strong evidence to show that the salt bridge between beta146His and beta94Asp and the binding pocket of allosteric effectors can be affected as the result of modifications at beta93Cys, which result in the destabilization of the T-state and a reduced response of these Hbs to allosteric effectors. We further propose that the impaired alkaline Bohr effect can be attributed to the effect on the contributions of several surface histidyl residues which are altered because of the environmental changes caused by mutations and chemical modifications at beta93Cys.  相似文献   

19.
Individual, soluble human alpha-globin chains were expressed in bacteria with exogenous heme and methionine aminopeptidase. The yields of soluble alpha chains in bacteria were comparable to those of recombinant non-alpha chains expressed under the same conditions. Molecular mass and gel-filtration properties of purified recombinant alpha chains were the same as those of authentic human alpha chains. Biochemical and biophysical properties of isolated alpha chains were identical to those of native human alpha chains as assessed by UV/vis, circular dichroism (CD), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy which contrasts with previous results of refolded precipitated alpha chains made in the presence of heme in vitro (M. T. Sanna et al., J. Biol. Chem. 272, 3478-3486, 1997). Mixtures of purified, soluble recombinant alpha-globin and native beta-globin chains formed heterotetramers in vitro, and oxygen- and CO-binding properties as well as the heme environment of the assembled tetramers were experimentally indistinguishable from those of native human Hb A. UV/vis, CD, and NMR spectra of assembled Hb A were also the same as those of human Hb A. These results indicate that individual expressed alpha chains are stable in bacteria and fold properly in vivo and that they then can assemble with free beta chains to form hemoglobin heterotetramers in vivo as well as in vitro.  相似文献   

20.
We report an HPLC method for separating the four regioisomers of verdoheme formed in the coupled oxidation of hemin with oxygen and ascorbate in aqueous pyridine. The reversed-phase ion-pair system uses hexafluoroacetone and pyridine as ion-pair agents. The regiochemistry of the separated isomers was established both by HPLC of the corresponding biliverdin IX derivatives and by 1H NMR of each isomer. Optical spectra of the pyridine verdohemochrome isomers were similar to each other, but showed differences in the absorption maxima in the red region, which appear at 680, 663, 648 and 660 nm for the alpha, beta, gamma, and delta-isomers, respectively. Each of the four isomers was incorporated anaerobically into heme oxygenase-1, yielding the corresponding verdoheme-enzyme complex. The ferrous forms had absorption maxima at 690, 667, 655, and 663 nm, and their CO-bound forms had maxima at 638, 624, 616, and 626 nm for alpha, beta, gamma, and delta-isomer, respectively. Addition of ferricyanide to the alpha-verdoheme-heme oxygenase complex brought about a ferric low-spin heme-like signal, which is identical with the ferric alpha-verdoheme complexed with the heme oxygenase that was observed in the heme oxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

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