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1.
The influence of Cu2+ concentration, pH, and ionic strength of the solution as well as redox-inactive zinc ions on the rate of oxidation of sperm whale, horse, and pig oxymyoglobins (oxy-Mb) by copper ions has been studied. These myoglobins have homologous spatial structures and equal redox potentials but differ in the number of histidines located on the surface of the proteins. It was shown that oxy-Mb can be oxidized in the presence of Cu2+ through two distinct pathways depending on which histidine binds the reagent and how stable the complex is. A slow pH-dependent catalytic process is observed in the presence of equimolar Cu2+ concentration for sperm whale and horse oxymyoglobins. The curves of pH dependence in both cases are sigmoid with pK eff corresponding to the ionization. The process is caused by the strong binding of Cu2+ to His113 and His116, an analogous His residue being absent in pig Mb. In contrast, rapid oxidation of 10-15% of pig oxy-Mb is observed under the same conditions (fast phase), which is not accompanied by catalysis because the reduced copper is apparently not reoxidized. The complexing of Cu2+ with His97 situated near the heme is probably responsible for the fast phase of the reaction. The affinity of His97 for Cu2+ must be significantly lower than those of the catalytic His residues since the fast phase does not contribute markedly to the rate of sperm whale and horse oxy-Mb oxidation. Increasing copper concentration does not produce a proportional growth in the oxidation rate of sperm whale and horse oxy-Mbs. Which Cu2+ binding sites of Mb make main contributions to the His reaction rate at different Cu2+/Mb ratios from 0.25 to 10 is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The rate of the redox reaction between porcine MbO2 and ferri-Cyt c at different ionic strengths in the pH range 5-8 has been studied. At low ionic strength (I = 0-0.1) the pH dependence curve was found to have a sigmoid shape with pKeff approximately 5.7, implying the effect of ionization of His-119(GH1) at the "active site" of myoglobin on the kinetics of the process. In this range of ionic strengths the rate of the reaction decreases sharply. The slope of the curve in the coordinates of IgKexp versus square root of I/1 + square root of I varies depending on pH. It is greater at pH less than or equal to 6 and smaller at pH 7.5, which is due to deprotonation of His(GH1). At high ionic strength (I greater than 0.1) the rate of electron transfer is negligible, independent of pH and does not practically change as I increases from 0.1 to 1. It is shown that the local electrostatic interactions play a decisive role in the formation of an efficient electron-transfer complex between Mb and Cyt c. The binding of the zinc ion to His(GH1) was found to inhibit the electron transfer at I = 0.01, similarly to what occurs at a high ionic strength, though the "reactive" charges of the proteins are not screened and the positive charge at His(GH1) is retained. This suggests that His(GH1) is directly involved in the mechanism of electron transfer from Mb to Cyt c. The data obtained are compared with earlier data on the effect of pH, ionic strength and zinc ions on the reaction between MbO2 from sperm whale and Cyt c. To explain the higher efficiency of pig MbO2 as electron donor, the electrostatic and steric properties of both myoglobins have been analyzed.  相似文献   

3.
The influence of pH, ionic strength of the solution, and [Fe(CN)6]4- concentration on the rate of oxidation of sperm whale, horse, and pig oxymyoglobins, which is catalyzed by ferrocyanide ions, was studied. These myoglobins have homologous spatial structures and identical redox potentials but differ by the amount of His residues located on the protein surface. The effect of the MbO2 complexing with redox-inactive Zn2+ ion on the reaction rate was also examined. At the equimolar Zn2+ concentration, zinc ions form a stable complex with His119(GH1). It was found that the kinetic behavior of horse MbO2, which lacks His12(A10) substituted for by Gln, is fully analogous to one of sperm whale MbO2, while the oxidation of pig MbO2, three histidines of which, His12, His113(G14), and His116(G17), are replaced by Gln, is strongly inhibited. The mechanism of the catalysis was shown to involve specific binding of [Fe(CN)6]4- to the protein at the His119(GH1) site, which is in accord with the large positive electrostatic potential of this site and the presence here of a cavity large enough to accommodate [Fe(CN)6]4-. The nearby His113 and His116 residiues, which are absent in pig Mb, also play a very important role in the catalysis, because their protonation (especially of the last residue) is most likely responsible for the week oxidation of bound [Fe(CN)6]4- by dissolved oxygen.  相似文献   

4.
A comparative study of the rates of ferrocyanide-catalyzed oxidation of several oxymyoglobins by molecular oxygen is reported. Oxidation of the native oxymyoglobins from sperm whale, horse and pig, as well as the chemically modified (MbO(2)) sperm whale oxymyoglobin, with all accessible His residues alkylated by sodium bromoacetate (CM-MbO(2)), and the mutant sperm whale oxymyoglobin [MbO(2)(His119-->Asp)], was studied. The effect of pH, ionic strength and the concentration of anionic catalyst ferrocyanide, [Fe(CN)(6)](4-), on the oxidation rate is investigated, as well as the effect of MbO(2) complexing with redox-inactive Zn(2+), which forms the stable chelate complex with functional groups of His119, Lys16 and Asp122, all located nearby. The catalytic mechanism was demonstrated to involve specific [Fe(CN)(6)](4-) binding to the protein in the His119 region, which agrees with a high local positive electrostatic potential and the presence of a cavity large enough to accommodate [Fe(CN)(6)](4-) in that region. The protonation of the nearby His113 and especially His116 plays a very important role in the catalysis, accelerating the oxidation rate of bound [Fe(CN)(6)](4-) by dissolved oxygen. The simultaneous occurrence of both these factors (i.e. specific binding of [Fe(CN)(6)](4-) to the protein and its fast reoxidation by oxygen) is necessary for the efficient ferrocyanide-catalyzed oxidation of oxymyoglobin.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Myoglobins from rat, coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), buffalo sculpin (Enophrys bison) hearts, and yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) red skeletal muscle were partially purified and their O2 binding affinities determined. Commercially prepared sperm whale myoglobin was employed as an internal standard. Tested at 20°C, myoglobins from salmon and sculpin bound O2 with lower affinity than myoglobins from the rat or sperm whale. Oxygen binding studies at 12°C and 37°C suggest that this difference is adaptive, permitting myoglobins from cold-adapted fish to function at physiologically relevant temperatures. Taken together, purification and O2 binding data obtained in this study reveal a previously unrecognized diversity of myoglobin structure and function.  相似文献   

6.
The rates of oxygen uptake by rat liver mitochondria (MC) (native coupled, freshly frozen, and uncoupled by FCCP) have been measured polarographically in the absence (V 0) or presence (V 1) of 0.11–0.25 mM sperm whale MbO2. Under the same standard conditions, the rate of sperm whale MbO2 deoxygenation (V 2) has been studied spectrophotometrically in the presence of respiring MC. For freshly frozen MC, the dependence of V 1 and V 2 on the overall charge of MbO2 has been investigated at pH 5.6–7.6, and the influence of other differently charged proteins (apomyoglobin, egg lysozyme, lactalbumin, and BSA) has been studied at pH 7.4. It is shown that the rate of mitochondrial respiration in the presence of MbO2 increases by 10–30% (V 1 > V 0). No myoglobin effect is observed for FCCP-uncoupled MC (V max does not change). The rate of MbO2 deoxygenation is equal to the rate of oxygen uptake by mitochondria (V 2/V 1 ∼ 1 at pH 7.2–7.5). At varying pH < 7.2, the V 2 values become markedly higher than V 1, evidently due to the increased MbO2 positive charge and its stronger interaction with negatively charged mitochondrial membrane. At pH 7.4, on the contrary, V 2 is twice lower than V 1 in the case of negatively charged CM-MbO2 (pI 5.2), which has carboxymethylated histidines. Positively charged lysozyme (pI 11) strongly inhibits MbO2 deoxygenation (V 2) without affecting oxygen uptake by MC (V 0 and V 1). At the same time, apomyoglobin (pI 8.5), which is structurally very similar to the holoprotein, and both negatively charged lactalbumin (pI 4.4) and BSA (pI 4.7) have no substantial influence on V 2 and V 1. The MC membrane evidently has no specific sites for the interaction with myoglobin. Rather, the protein contacts with phospholipids of the outer membrane during MbO2 deoxygenation, and electrostatic interactions are of great importance for this process.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of zink ions, which according to the X-ray data are bound to the His GH1 residue of myoglobin, has been investigated. It is shown that the electron transfer in the system is almost completely inhibited at the equimolar Zn2+ concentration in the pH range 5 to 8. Unlike the reaction between the intact MbO2 and Cyt c, the electron transfer rate in this case does not depend on pH and ionic strength of the solution. Further increase of Zn2+ concentration up to the 20-fold molar excess has no significant effect on the rate of the process. Since the thermodynamic characteristics of the redox reaction between MbO2 and Cyt c are not altered in the presence of Zn2+, the findings obtained can be interpreted as indicating the important role of His GH1 in the formation of productive electron transfer complex.  相似文献   

8.
Overall association and dissociation rate constants were measured at 20 degrees C for O2, CO, and alkyl isocyanide binding to position 45 (CD3) mutants of pig and sperm whale myoglobins and to sperm whale myoglobin reconstituted with protoheme IX dimethyl ester. In pig myoglobin, Lys45(CD3) was replaced with Arg, His, Ser, and Glu; in sperm whale myoglobin, Arg45(CD3) was replaced with Ser and Gly. Intramolecular rebinding of NO, O2, and methyl isocyanide to Arg45, Ser45, Glu45, and Lys45(native) pig myoglobins was measured following 35-ps and 17-ns excitation pulses. The shorter, picosecond laser flash was used to examine ligand recombination from photochemically produced contact pairs, and the longer, nanosecond flash was used to measure the rebinding of ligands farther removed from the iron atom. Mutations at position 45 or esterification of the heme did not change significantly (less than or equal to 2-fold) the overall association rate constants for NO, CO, and O2 binding at room temperature. These data demonstrate unequivocally that Lys(Arg)45 makes little contribution to the outer kinetic barrier for the entry of diatomic gases into the distal pocket of myoglobin, a result that contradicts a variety of previous structural and theoretical interpretations. However, the rates of geminate recombination of NO and O2 and the affinity of myoglobin for O2 were dependent upon the basicity of residue 45. The series of substitutions Arg45, Lys45, Ser45, and Glu45 in pig myoglobin led to a 3-fold decrease in the initial rate for the intramolecular, picosecond rebinding of NO and 4-fold decrease in the geminate rate constant for the nanosecond rebinding of O2. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The unfolding at pH 8 of chicken cardiac aquometmyoglobin was examined as a function of temperature and concentration of guanidinium chloride using the two-state model. The isothermal unfolding data at 25°C were fitted to Tanford's transfer model and the binding model of Aune and Tanford. The estimates obtained for ΔGD) were virtually identical, viz., 8.3 ±0.3 kcal mol?1. The chicken metmyoglobin is thus some 5.3 kcal mol?1 less stable than that of sperm whale metmyoglobin. The unfolding parameters α and Δn were decreased 20% from those of mammalian myoglobins thus far examined, suggesting nonidentity of native conformations. The apparent enthalpy change on unfolding was dependent on both temperature and denaturant concentration. The decreases in the isothermal unfolding parameters from those of sperm whale are principally assigned to three of the 46 sequence changes.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of small amounts of low-molecular electron acceptor, potassium ferricyanide, 1 to 20% relative to the cytohrome c concentration, on the rate of electron transfer in the sperm whale oxymyoglobin--horse heart cytochrome c and deoxymyoglobin--cytochrome c systems (under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, respectively) was studied. At low ionic strength, the redox reaction rate was found to increase proportionally to the concentration of ferricyanide in both redox systems. The effect depends on pH in the pH range 5-8, increasing sharply at pH < 6. It was shown that the enhancing of electron transfer is caused by the complexing of [Fe(CN)6]3- with cytohrome c in the Lys72 region, where one of the two strong binding sites for this anion is determined by NMR. Both the high ionic strength and the chemical modification of Lys72 residue inhibit this effect at low ionic strength, markedly decreasing the rate of reaction with myoglobin. Under the same conditions, the effect of ferricyanide in the reaction of oxy-Mb with yeast cytohrome c, which is isopotential to animal cytochromes c but possesses trimethylated Lys72, was several times smaller. In turn, the chemical modification of His residues in myoglobin and the complexing of zinc ion to His119(GH1) almost completely inhibit electron transfer in the systems. Thus, electron transfer between the proteins must proceed through the formation of the Mb.[Fe(CN)6]3-.Cyt c ternary complex, the contacting sites being localized in the His119(GH1) region of myoglobin and near Lys72 of cytohrome c. The increased electron transfer rate in the presence of [Fe(CN)6]3- can be explained by that its binding near Lys72, firstly, provides better electrostatic interactions in the electron transfer complex and, besides, decreases significantly (about 2-fold) the tunneling distance between the two hemes (two lengths of 1.7 and 1.2 nm instead of one of 2.9 nm).  相似文献   

11.
The titration behavior of individual tyrosine residues of myoglobins has been studied by observing the pH dependence of the chemical shifts of Czeta and Cgamma of these residues in natural abundance of 13C Fourier transform NMR spectra (at 15.18 MHz, in 20-mm sample tubes, at 37 degrees) of cyanoferrimyoglobins from sperm whale, horse, and red kangaroo. A comparison of the pH dependence of the spectra of the three proteins yielded specific assignments for the resonance of Tyr-151 (sperm whale) and Tyr-103 (sperm whale and horse). Selective proton decoupling yielded specific assignments for Czeta of Tyr-146 of the cyanoferrimyoglobins from horse and kangaroo, but not the corresponding assignment for sperm whale. The pH dependence of the chemical shifts indicated that only Tyr-151 and Tyr-103 are titratable tyrosine residues. Even at pH 12, Tyr-146 did not begin to titrate. The titration behavior of C zeta and Cgamma of Tyr-151 of sperm whale cyanoferrimyoglobin yielded a single pK value of 10.6. The pH dependence of the chemical shift of each of the resonances of Tyr-103 of the cyanoferrimyoglobins from horse and sperm whale could not be fitted with the use of a single pK value, but was consistent with two pK values (about 9.8 and 11.6). Furthermore, the resonances of Czeta and Cgamma of Tyr-103 broadened at high pH. The titration behavior of the tyrosines of sperm whale carbon monoxide myoglobin and horse ferrimyoglobin was also examined. A comparison of all the experimental results indicated that Tyr-151 is exposed to solvent, Tyr-146 is not exposed, and Tyr-103 exhibits intermediate behavior. These results for myoglobins in solution are consistent with expectations based on the crystal structure.  相似文献   

12.
The reaction of cyanide metmyoglobin with dithionite conforms to a two-step sequential mechanism with formation of an unstable intermediate, identified as cyanide bound ferrous myoglobin. This reaction was investigated by stopped-flow time resolved spectroscopy using different myoglobins, i.e. those from horse heart, Aplysia limacina buccal muscle, and three recombinant derivatives of sperm whale skeletal muscle myoglobin (Mb) (the wild type and two mutants). The myoglobins from horse and sperm whale (wild type) have in the distal position (E7) a histidyl residue, which is missing in A. limacina Mb as well as the two sperm whale mutants (E7 His----Gly and E7 His----Val). All these proteins in the reduced form display an extremely low affinity for cyanide at pH less than 10. The differences in spectroscopy and kinetics of the ferrous cyanide complex of these myoglobins indicate a role of the distal pocket on the properties of the complex. The two mutants of sperm whale Mb are characterized by a rate constant for the decay of the unstable intermediate much faster than that of the wild type, at all pH values explored. Therefore, we envisage a specific role of the distal His (E7) in controlling the rate of cyanide dissociation and also find that this effect depends on the protonation of a single ionizable group, with pK = 7.2, attributed to the E7 imidazole ring. The results on A. limacina Mb, which displays the slowest rate of cyanide dissociation, suggests that a considerable stabilizing effect can be exerted by Arg E10 which, according to Bolognesi et al. (Bolognesi, M., Coda, A., Frigerio, F., Gatti, C., Ascenzi, P., and Brunori, M. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 213, 621-625), interacts inside the pocket with fluoride bound to the ferric heme iron. A mechanism of control for the rate of dissociation of cyanide from ferrous myoglobin, involving protonation of the bound anion, is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
To determine the nature and characteristic parameters of the myoglobin-mitochondrion interaction during oxymyoglobin (MbO2) deoxygenation in the cell, we studied the quenching of the intrinsic mitochondrial flavin and tryptophan fluorescence by different liganded myoglobins in the pH range of 6–8, as well as the quenching of the fluorescence of the membrane probes 1,8-ANS and merocyanine 540 (M 540) embedded into the mitochondrial membrane. Physiologically active MbO2 and oxidized metmyoglobin (metMb), which are unable to bind oxygen, were used as the quenchers. The absence of quenching of flavin and tryptophan fluorescence implies that myoglobin does not form quenching complexes with either electron transport chain proteins of the inner mitochondrial membrane or with outer membrane proteins. We found, however, that MbO2 and metMb effectively quench 1,8-ANS and M 540 fluorescence in the pH range of 6–8. Characteristic parameters of 1,8-ANS and M 540 fluorescence quenching by the myoglobins (extent of quenching and quencher binding constant, K m) are very similar, indicating that both probes are localized in phospholipid sites of the mitochondrial membrane, and myoglobin is complexed with these sites. The dependence of K m on ionic strength proves the important role of coulombic interactions in the formation of the quenching complex. Since the overall charge of myoglobin is shown not to influence the K m values, the ionic strength dependence must be due to local electrostatic interactions in which polar groups of some part of the myoglobin molecule participate. The most likely candidates to interact with anionic groups of mitochondrial phospholipids are invariant lysine and arginine residues in the environment of the myoglobin heme cavity, which do not change their ionization state in the pH range investigated.  相似文献   

14.
In addition to reversible O2 binding, respiratory proteins of the globin family, hemoglobin (Hb) and myoglobin (Mb), participate in redox reactions with various metal complexes, including biologically significant ones, such as those of copper and iron. HbO2 and MbO2 are present in cells in large amounts and, as redox agents, can contribute to maintaining cell redox state and resisting oxidative stress. Divalent copper complexes with high redox potentials (E 0, 200-600 mV) and high stability constants, such as [Cu(phen)2]2+, [Cu(dmphen)2]2+, and CuDTA oxidize ferrous heme proteins by the simple outer-sphere electron transfer mechanism through overlapping π-orbitals of the heme and the copper complex. Weaker oxidants, such as Cu2+, CuEDTA, CuNTA, CuCit, CuATP, and CuHis (E 0≤ 100-150 mV) react with HbO2 and MbO2 through preliminary binding to the protein with substitution of the metal ligands with protein groups and subsequent intramolecular electron transfer in the complex (the site-specific outer-sphere electron transfer mechanism). Oxidation of HbO2 and MbO2 by potassium ferricyanide and Fe(3) complexes with NTA, EDTA, CDTA, ATP, 2,3-DPG, citrate, and pyrophosphate PPi proceeds mainly through the simple outer-sphere electron transfer mechanism via the exposed heme edge. According to Marcus theory, the rate of this reaction correlates with the difference in redox potentials of the reagents and their self-exchange rates. For charged reagents, the reaction may be preceded by their nonspecific binding to the protein due to electrostatic interactions. The reactions of LbO2 with carboxylate Fe complexes, unlike its reactions with ferricyanide, occur via the site-specific outer-sphere electron transfer mechanism, even though the same reagents oxidize structurally similar MbO2 and cytochrome b 5 via the simple outer-sphere electron transfer mechanism. Of particular biological interest is HbO2 and MbO2 transformation into met-forms in the presence of small amounts of metal ions or complexes (catalysis), which, until recently, had been demonstrated only for copper compounds with intermediate redox potentials. The main contribution to the reaction rate comes from copper binding to the “inner” histidines, His97 (0.66 nm from the heme) that forms a hydrogen bond with the heme propionate COO group, and the distal His64. The affinity of both histidines for copper is much lower than that of the surface histidines residues, and they are inaccessible for modification with chemical reagents. However, it was found recently that the high-potential Fe(3) complex, potassium ferricyanide (400 mV), at a 5 to 20% of molar protein concentration can be an efficient catalyst of MbO2 oxidation into metMb. The catalytic process includes binding of ferrocyanide anion in the region of the His119 residue due to the presence there of a large positive local electrostatic potential and existence of a “pocket” formed by Lys16, Ala19, Asp20, and Arg118 that is sufficient to accommodate [Fe(CN)6]4–. Fast, proton-assisted reoxidation of the bound ferrocyanide by oxygen (which is required for completion of the catalytic cycle), unlike slow [Fe(CN)6]4– oxidation in solution, is provided by the optimal location of neighboring protonated His113 and His116, as it occurs in the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

15.
G B Postnikova 《Biofizika》1986,31(1):163-175
Progress in the studies of the electron transport mechanism in biological systems is greatly hindered by the lack of detailed structural information about the components of these systems. That is why a study of electron transfer between protein molecules with the known spatial organization in model reactions in vitro is of great importance. In this respect the MbO2--Cyt C oxidation-reduction reaction offers unique possibilities. Studies of the effects of pH and ionic strength of the medium on the kinetics of this reaction in combination with chemical modification of single amino acid residues of Mb and Cyt C enabled us to identify those parts of the surface of haemoproteins where the molecules come into "active contact". A variation in the number or/and the arrangement of the charged groups at the "active sites" of the molecules induced by both changing the medium pH and chemical modification of some of these groups lowers markedly the probability of electron transfer in the system (e.g. His GH1 and His A10 in Mb) or blocks it entirely (acylation of Lys 72 (73) or Tyr 74 in Cyt C). Based on the results obtained and on the data of Mb and Cyt C X-ray analysis, the figures of spatial arrangement of the groups at the "active sites" of these molecules are presented.  相似文献   

16.
Dynamic aspects of the heme-binding site of myoglobins derived from two phylogenetically distant species, namely sperm whale and bluefin tuna, have been investigated by studying steady-state and time-resolved emission properties of 2-p-toluidinyl-6-naphthalene sulfonic acid (TNS) apomyoglobin conjugates. Multi-frequency phase and modulation fluorometry data indicate that charge movements occur in the fluorophore environment during the excited state lifetime in the sperm whale myoglobin system. In the case of the bluefin tuna myoglobin TNS adduct these movements were not detected, indicating that the relaxation processes differ in the two types of myoglobins.  相似文献   

17.
For modeling the interaction of myoglobin with mitochondrial membranes, the adsorption of different ligand forms, the physiologically active reduced MbO2 and inactive oxidized met-Mb, on one of the surfaces of artificial bilayer lipid membrane (BLM) was studied using a potentiodynamic technique known as the “capacity minimization” method. As mitochondrial membranes are negatively charged, BLM of the negatively charged palmitoyl-2-oleyl-phosphatidyl glycerol (POPG) and neutral soybean phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) were used. It is shown that both myoglobins strongly interact with BLM in the pH range 6–8. The dependence of the potential difference between cis-and trans-surfaces of the lipid membrane (ΔE, mV) on the protein concentration is characteristic of the Langmuir adsorption isotherm, and the saturation level (ΔE max, mV) corresponds to monolayer of myoglobin. The protein adsorption is essentially electrostatic in nature, as adsorption activity increases sharply in the case of the membrane from POPG: ∼15-fold in the case of MbO2 and ∼2.5 times for met-Mb. The parameters of the MbO2 and met-Mb adsorption on BLM of lecithin and POPG do not change in the pH 6–8 range. It can be assumed that the anionic groups of phospholipids associate with the cationic groups of the protein, the charge state of those does not change in the pH 6–8 range. The most likely candidates for interaction with phospholipids of BLM are invariant lysines and arginines in the environment of the myoglobin heme cavity.  相似文献   

18.
Myoglobins from three small placental mammals and one small marsupial were isolated from cardiac or skeletal muscle. The conformational free energies of these four myoglobins were estimated from guanidinium chloride unfolding data at pH 8 and 25 degrees. The myoglobins from rat and rabbit are more stable than that of the most stable myoglobin previously studied, that of the sperm whale. In addition, these two myoglobins unfold with greater cooperativity than previously characterized myoglobins. The data obtained herein demonstrate unequivocally for the first time that the stability of homeotherm myoglobins correlates with neither the size of the organism nor its metabolic rate.  相似文献   

19.
The oxygenated form of myoglobin or hemoglobin is oxidized easily to the ferric met-form with generation of the superoxide anion. To make clear the possible role(s) of the distal histidine (H64) residue in the reaction, we have carried out detailed pH-dependence studies of the autoxidation rate, using some typical H64 mutants of sperm whale myoglobin, over the wide range of pH 5-12 in 0.1 M buffer at 25 degrees C. Each mutation caused a dramatic increase in the autoxidation rate with the trend H64V >/= H64G >/= H64L > H64Q > H64 (wild-type) at pH 7.0, whereas each mutant protein showed a characteristic pH-profile which is essentially different from that of the wild-type or native sperm whale MbO2. In particular, all the mutants have lost the acid-catalyzed process that can play a dominant role in the autoxidation reaction of most mammalian myoglobins or hemoglobins. Kinetic analyses of various types of pH-profiles lead us to conclude that the distal histidine residue can play a dual role in the nucleophilic displacement of O2- from MbO2 or HbO2 in protic, aqueous solution. One is in a proton-relay mechanism via its imidazole ring, and the other is in the maximum protection of the FeO2 center against a water molecule or an hydroxyl ion that can enter the heme pocket from the surrounding solvent.  相似文献   

20.
Kinetic evaluation of the oxidation of oxymyoglobin (MbO2) to metmyoglobin (Mb+) by bis(dimethylglyoximato)cobalt nitrosyl [Co(NO)(DMGH)2] has established that the mechanism of this transformation involves initial dissociation of nitric oxide from Co(NO)(DMGH)2, followed by direct oxidation of MbO2 by nitric oxide. Nitrate formation accompanies the production of Mb+ and is proposed to arise from isomerization of the initially formed peroxynitrite ion. By comparative kinetic determinations with nitrosyl transfer from the cobalt nitrosyl reagent to deoxyhemoglobin, the rate constant for oxidation of MbO2 by nitric oxide is calculated to be 31 X 106 M?1sec?1 at 10.0°C in phosphate-buffered media at pH 7.0. Bis(dimethylglyoximato)cobalt(II), the cobalt complex formed by nitric oxide dissociation from Co(NO)(DMGH)2, is an effective trap for dioxygen liberated from MbO2. The resulting μ-peroxo- or μ-superoxo-dicobaloxime(III) oxidizes deoxymyoglobin to metmyoglobin at a rate that is competitive with oxidation induced by Co(NO)(DMGH)2.  相似文献   

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