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1.
H‐NOX (Heme Nitric Oxide/Oxygen) domain has widespread occurrence, either standalone or associated with functional proteins, sending signals for functions that span from modulating vasodilation and neurotransmission with humans to competition and symbiosis with bacteria. Understanding how H‐NOX works, and possibly intervening on degeneration for health purposes, needs first clarifying how diatomic gases are relocated through this protein in relation to the deeply buried heme. To this end, a biased form of molecular dynamics, i.e., Random Accelaration Molecular Dynamics (RAMD), is used by applying a randomly oriented tiny force to heme‐dissociated CO of Nostoc sp. H‐NOX, while changing randomly the direction of the force, if CO travels less than specified for the evaluated block. The result is that a large area of the protein, comprising amino acids from serine 44 to leucine 67 along two adjacent helices, offers a broad portal to CO from the surrounding medium to the deeply buried heme. Most traffic is concentrated through a channel lined by tyrosine 49, valine 52, and leucine 67. This modifies the picture drawn from mapping Xe cavities on pressurizing Nostoc sp. H‐NOX with Xe gas. What is the main pathway with Xe‐cavity mapping becomes a minor pathway with RAMD, and vice versa. The reason is that the fluctuating protein under MD creates clefts for CO slipping through, as it is expected to occur in nature.  相似文献   

2.
The heme cofactor in soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a selective receptor for NO, an important signaling molecule in eukaryotes. The sGC heme domain has been localized to the N-terminal 194 amino acids of the beta1 subunit of sGC and is a member of a family of conserved hemoproteins, called the H-NOX family (Heme-Nitric Oxide and/or OXygen-binding domain). Three new members of this family have now been cloned and characterized, two proteins from Legionella pneumophila (L1 H-NOX and L2 H-NOX) and one from Nostoc punctiforme (Np H-NOX). Like sGC, L1 H-NOX forms a 5-coordinate Fe(II)-NO complex. However, both L2 H-NOX and Np H-NOX form temperature-dependent mixtures of 5- and 6-coordinate Fe(II)-NO complexes; at low temperature, they are primarily 6-coordinate, and at high temperature, the equilibrium is shifted toward a 5-coordinate geometry. This equilibrium is fully reversible with temperature in the absence of free NO. This process is analyzed in terms of a thermally labile proximal Fe(II)-His bond and suggests that in both the 5- and 6-coordinate Fe(II)-NO complexes of L2 H-NOX and Np H-NOX, NO is bound in the distal heme pocket of the H-NOX fold. NO dissociation kinetics for L1 H-NOX and L2 H-NOX have been determined and support a model in which NO dissociates from the distal side of the heme in both 5- and 6-coordinate complexes.  相似文献   

3.
Heme-Nitric oxide and/or OXygen binding (H-NOX) proteins are a family of diatomic gas binding hemoproteins that have attracted intense research interest. Here we employ X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy to study the nitric oxide (NO) binding site of H-NOX. This is the first time this technique has been utilized to examine the NO/H-NOX signaling pathway. XANES spectra of wildtype and a point mutant (proline 115 to alanine, P115A) of the H-NOX domain from Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis (Tt H-NOX) were obtained and analyzed for ferrous and ferric complexes of the protein. This work provides specific structural characterization of the solution state of several Tt H-NOX ferrous complexes (− unligated, − NO, and − CO) that were previously unavailable. Our iron K-edges indicate effective charge on the iron center in the various complexes and report on the electronic environment of heme iron. We analyzed the ligand field indicator ratio (LFIR), which is extracted from XANES spectra, for each complex, providing an understanding of ligand field strength, spin state of the central iron, movement of the iron atom upon ligation, and ligand binding properties. In particular, our LFIRs indicate that the heme iron is dramatically displaced towards the distal pocket during ligand binding. Based on these results, we propose that iron displacement towards the distal heme pocket is an essential step in signal initiation in H-NOX proteins. This provides a mechanistic link between ligand binding and the changes in heme and protein conformation that have been observed for H-NOX family members during signaling.  相似文献   

4.
This work deals with dioxygen (O2) binding sites and pathways through inducible human heme oxygenase (HO‐1). The experimentally known distal binding site 1, and sites 2–3 above it, could be reproduced by means of non‐deterministic random‐acceleration molecular‐dynamics (RAMD) simulations. In addition, RAMD revealed the proximal binding site 5, a deeply‐seated binding site 4, which lies behind heme, as well as a few gates communicating with the external medium. In getting from site 1 to the main gate, which lies on the protein front opposed to site 4, O2 follows chiefly the shortest direct pathway. Less frequently, O2 visits intermediate sites 2, 4, or 5 along longer pathways. A similarity between HO‐1, myoglobin, and cytoglobin in using, for diatomic gas delivery, the direct shortest pathway from the heme center to the surrounding medium, is emphasized. Otherwise, comparing other proteins and diatomic gases, each system reveals its peculiarities as to sites, gates, and pathways. Thus, relating these properties to the physiological functions of the proteins remains in general a challenge for future studies.  相似文献   

5.
The pathways of escape of carbon monoxide (CO) from sperm whale myoglobin were investigated by means of a biased form of all‐atoms molecular dynamics (RAMD), whereby a weak, randomly oriented force is applied to the center of mass of CO. The force only persists if the direction taken by CO continues for a given period of time, otherwise a new direction is randomly chosen. A statistically significant number of RAMD runs gave distinct responses according to the level of approximations used for the model. Thus, with rigid bonds to all H‐atoms, several portals for CO egress toward the solvent, besides the main H64 gate, were identified, like in recently published unbiased massive MD, six orders of magnitude acceleration of CO escape in RAMD notwithstanding. In contrast, by removing the approximation of rigid bonds in the model, only one of these extra portals was identified, besides the H64 portal. Sticking to this all‐free‐bonds model, Perutz's early suggestion that the H64 imidazole must rotate ‘out’ toward the solvent in order that CO can cross the H64 gate was directly implemented. RAMD Simulations with this model led to CO egress from the H64 gate only, reconciling theory with experiments.  相似文献   

6.
The Heme Nitric oxide/OXygen binding (H-NOX) family of proteins have important functions in gaseous ligand signaling in organisms from bacteria to humans, including nitric oxide (NO) sensing in mammals, and provide a model system for probing ligand selectivity in hemoproteins. A unique vibrational feature that is ubiquitous throughout the H-NOX family is the presence of a high C-O stretching frequency. To investigate the cause of this spectroscopic characteristic, the Fe-CO and C-O stretching frequencies were probed in the H-NOX domain from Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis (Tt H-NOX) using resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy. Four classes of heme pocket mutants were generated to assess the changes in stretching frequency: (i) the distal H-bonding network, (ii) the proximal histidine ligand, (iii) modulation of the heme conformation via Ile-5 and Pro-115, and (iv) the conserved Tyr-Ser-Arg (YxSxR) motif. These mutations revealed important electrostatic interactions that dampen the back-donation of the Fe(II) d(π) electrons into the CO π* orbitals. The most significant change occurred upon disruption of the H-bonds between the strictly conserved YxSxR motif and the heme propionate groups, producing two dominant CO-bound heme conformations. One conformer was structurally similar to Tt H-NOX WT, whereas the other displayed a decrease in ν(C-O) of up to ~70 cm(-1) relative to the WT protein, with minimal changes in ν(Fe-CO). Taken together, these results show that the electrostatic interactions in the Tt H-NOX binding pocket are primarily responsible for the high ν(C-O) by decreasing the Fe d(π) → CO π* back-donation and suggest that the dominant mechanism by which this family modulates the Fe(II)-CO bond likely involves the YxSxR motif.  相似文献   

7.
Diatomic ligand discrimination by soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) is paramount to cardiovascular homeostasis and neuronal signaling. Nitric oxide (NO) stimulates sGC activity 200-fold compared with only four-fold by carbon monoxide (CO). The molecular details of ligand discrimination and differential response to NO and CO are not well understood. These ligands are sensed by the heme domain of sGC, which belongs to the heme nitric oxide oxygen (H-NOX) domain family, also evolutionarily conserved in prokaryotes. Here we report crystal structures of the free, NO-bound, and CO-bound H-NOX domains of a cyanobacterial homolog. These structures and complementary mutational analysis in sGC reveal a molecular ruler mechanism that allows sGC to favor NO over CO while excluding oxygen, concomitant to signaling that exploits differential heme pivoting and heme bending. The heme thereby serves as a flexing wedge, allowing the N-terminal subdomain of H-NOX to shift concurrent with the transition of the six- to five-coordinated NO-bound state upon sGC activation. This transition can be modulated by mutations at sGC residues 74 and 145 and corresponding residues in the cyanobacterial H-NOX homolog.  相似文献   

8.
Eukaryotic nitric oxide (NO) signaling involves modulation of cyclic GMP (cGMP) levels through activation of the soluble isoform of guanylate cyclase (sGC). sGC is a heterodimeric hemoprotein that contains a Heme-Nitric oxide and OXygen binding (H-NOX) domain, a Per/ARNT/Sim (PAS) domain, a coiled-coil (CC) domain, and a catalytic domain. To evaluate the role of these domains in regulating the ligand binding properties of the heme cofactor of NO-sensitive sGC, we constructed chimeras by swapping the rat β1 H-NOX domain with the homologous region of H-NOX domain-containing proteins from Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis, Vibrio cholerae, and Caenorhabditis elegans (TtTar4H, VCA0720, and Gcy-33, respectively). Characterization of ligand binding by electronic absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopy indicates that the other rat sGC domains influence the bacterial and worm H-NOX domains. Analysis of cGMP production in these proteins reveals that the chimeras containing bacterial H-NOX domains exhibit guanylate cyclase activity, but this activity is not influenced by gaseous ligand binding to the heme cofactor. The rat-worm chimera containing the atypical sGC Gcy-33 H-NOX domain was weakly activated by NO, CO, and O(2), suggesting that atypical guanylate cyclases and NO-sensitive guanylate cyclases have a common molecular mechanism for enzyme activation. To probe the influence of the other sGC domains on the mammalian sGC heme environment, we generated heme pocket mutants (Pro118Ala and Ile145Tyr) in the β1 H-NOX construct (residues 1-194), the β1 H-NOX-PAS-CC construct (residues 1-385), and the full-length α1β1 sGC heterodimer (β1 residues 1-619). Spectroscopic characterization of these proteins shows that interdomain communication modulates the coordination state of the heme-NO complex and the heme oxidation rate. Taken together, these findings have important implications for the allosteric mechanism of regulation within H-NOX domain-containing proteins.  相似文献   

9.
In a preliminary exploration of the dummy model for diiron proteins, random‐acceleration molecular dynamics (RAMD) revealed that a pure four‐helix bundle structure, like hemerythrin, constitutes an efficient cage for dioxygen (O2), which can only leave from defined, albeit very broad, gates. However, this well ordered structure does not constitute an archetype on which to compare O2 permeation of other diiron proteins, like the complex of soluble methane monooxygenase hydroxylase with the regulatory protein (sMMOH‐MMOB). The reason is that with this complex, unlike hemerythrin, the four helices of the four‐helix bundle are heavily bent, and RAMD showed that most traps for O2 lie outside them. It was also observed that, in spite of a nearly identical van der Waals radius for O2 and the natural substrate CH4, the latter behaves under RAMD as a bulkier molecule than O2, requiring a higher external force to be brought out of sMMOH‐MMOB along trajectories of viable length. All that determined with sMMOH‐MMOB multiple gates and multiple pathways to each of them through several binding pockets, for both O2 and CH4. Of the two equally preferred pathways for O2, at right angle with one another, one proved to be in accordance with the Xe‐atom mapping for sMMOH. In contrast, none of the pathways identified for CH4 proved to be in accordance with such mapping, CH4 looking for more open avenues instead.  相似文献   

10.
Using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy combined with temperature derivative spectroscopy (TDS) at cryogenic temperatures, we have studied CO binding to the heme and CO migration among cavities in the interior of the dimeric hemoglobin of Scapharca inaequivalvis (HbI) after photodissociation. By combining these studies with X-ray crystallography, three transient ligand docking sites were identified: a primary docking site B in close vicinity to the heme iron, and two secondary docking sites C and D corresponding to the Xe4 and Xe2 cavities of myoglobin. To assess the relevance of these findings for physiological binding, we also performed flash photolysis experiments on HbICO at room temperature and equilibrium binding studies with dioxygen. Our results show that the Xe4 and Xe2 cavities serve as transient docking sites for unbound ligands in the protein, but not as way stations on the entry/exit pathway. For HbI, the so-called histidine gate mechanism proposed for other globins appears as a plausible entry/exit route as well.  相似文献   

11.
Price MS  Chao LY  Marletta MA 《Biochemistry》2007,46(48):13677-13683
Nitric oxide (NO) signaling in animals controls processes such as smooth muscle relaxation and neurotransmission by activation of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). Prokaryotic homologues of the sGC heme domain, called H-NOX domains, have been identified and are generally found in a predicted operon in conjunction with a histidine kinase. Here, we show that an H-NOX protein (SO2144) from Shewanella oneidensis directly interacts with the sensor histidine kinase (SO2145), binds NO in a 5-coordinate complex similar to mammalian sGC, and in that form inhibits the activity of a histidine kinase (SO2145). We also describe the first account of NO formation by S. oneidensis under anaerobic growth conditions derived from nitrate and nitrite. These observations suggest that the S. oneidensis H-NOX and histidine kinase pair function as part of a novel two-component signaling pathway that is responsive to NO formation from higher nitrogen oxides used as electron acceptors when oxygen is low and thereby functioning as an environmental sensor.  相似文献   

12.
We report the results of an extended molecular dynamics simulation on the migration of photodissociated carbon monoxide in wild-type sperm whale myoglobin. Our results allow following one possible ligand migration dynamics from the distal pocket to the Xe1 cavity via a path involving the other xenon binding cavities and momentarily two additional packing defects along the pathway. Comparison with recent time resolved structural data obtained by Laue crystallography with subnanosecond to millisecond resolution shows a more than satisfactory agreement. In fact, according to time resolved crystallography, CO, after photolysis, can occupy the Xe1 and Xe4 cavities. However, no information on the trajectory of the ligand from the distal pocket to the Xe1 is available. Our results clearly show one possible path within the protein. In addition, although our data refer to a single trajectory, the local dynamics of the ligand in each cavity is sufficiently equilibrated to obtain local structural and thermodynamic information not accessible to crystallography. In particular, we show that the CO motion and the protein fluctuations are strictly correlated: free energy calculations of the migration between adjacent cavities show that the migration is not a simple diffusion but is kinetically or thermodynamically driven by the collective motions of the protein; conversely, the protein fluctuations are influenced by the ligand in such a way that the opening/closure of the passage between adjacent cavities is strictly correlated to the presence of CO in its proximity. The compatibility between time resolved crystallographic experiments and molecular dynamics simulations paves the way to a deeper understanding of the role of internal dynamics and packing defects in the control of ligand binding in heme proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy in the CO stretch bands combined with temperature derivative spectroscopy (TDS) was used to characterize intermediate states obtained by photolysis of two sperm whale mutant myoglobins, YQR (L29(B10)Y, H64(E7)Q, T67(E10)R) and YQRF (with an additional I107(G8)F replacement). Both mutants assume two different bound-state conformations, A(0) and A(3), which can be distinguished by their different CO bands near 1965 and 1933 cm(-1). They most likely originate from different conformations of the Gln-64 side chain. Within each A substate, a number of photoproduct states have been characterized on the basis of the temperature dependence of recombination in TDS experiments. Different locations and orientations of the ligand within the protein can be distinguished by the infrared spectra of the photolyzed CO. Recombination from the primary docking site, B, near the heme dominates below 50 K. Above 60 K, ligand rebinding occurs predominantly from a secondary docking site, C', in which the CO is trapped in the Xe4 cavity on the distal side, as shown by crystallography of photolyzed YQR and L29W myoglobin CO. Another kinetic state (C") has been identified from which rebinding occurs around 130 K. Moreover, a population appearing above the solvent glass transition at approximately 180 K (D state) is assigned to rebinding from the Xe1 cavity, as suggested by the photoproduct structure of the L29W sperm whale myoglobin mutant. For both the YQR and YQRF mutants, rebinding from the B sites near the heme differs for the two A substates, supporting the view that the return of the ligand from the C', C", and D states is not governed by the recombination barrier at the heme iron but rather by migration to the active site. Comparison of YQR and YQRF shows that access to the Xe4 site (C') is severely restricted by introduction of the bulky Phe side chain at position 107.  相似文献   

14.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a nitric oxide (NO) sensing hemoprotein that has been found in eukaryotes from Drosophila to humans. Prokaryotic proteins with significant homology to the heme domain of sGC have recently been identified through genomic analysis. This family of heme proteins has been named the H-NOX domain, for Heme-Nitric oxide/OXygen binding domain. The key observation from initial studies in this family is that some members, those proteins from most eukaryotes and facultative aerobic prokaryotes, bind NO in a five-coordinate heme complex, but do not bind oxygen (O(2)), the same ligand binding characteristics as sGC. H-NOX family members from obligate aerobic prokaryotes bind O(2) and NO in six-coordinate complexes, similar to the globins and other O(2)-sensing heme proteins. The molecular factors that contribute to these differences in ligand specificity, within a family of sequence related proteins, are the subject of this review.  相似文献   

15.
The cyanobacteria Anacystis nidulans (Synechococcus sp. PCC6301), Synechocystis sp. PCC6803, Anabaena sp. PCC 7120, and Nostoc sp. PCC8009 were grown photoautotrophically under reduced oxygen tension in a medium with sulfate replaced by thiosulfate and nitrate replaced by ammonium as the S- and N-sources, respectively. In addition, Anabaena and Nostoc were grown under dinitrogen-fixing conditions in a medium free of combined nitrogen. Membranes were isolated from late-logarithmic cells (culture density corresponding to approximately 3 microliters packed cells per milliliter); cytoplasmic and thylakoid membranes were separated and purified according to established procedures. Acid-labile hemes were extracted from the membranes and subjected to reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Separated hemes were analyzed spectroscopically and identified by comparison with authentic standards. In addition to hemes B, A, and O, the latter of which was induced under semianaerobic conditions only, substitution of thiosulfate and ammonium for the oxy-anions sulfate and nitrate led to the appearance of spectrally discernible heme D in the membranes and extracts therefrom. However, spectroscopic and kinetic investigation of the membrane-bound heme D rather disproved any reaction with oxygen or carbon monoxide. Kinetic measurements performed with the membrane-bound respiratory oxidase gave evidence for only two kinetically competent terminal oxidases, a3 and o3, both apparently associated with a single type of apoprotein, viz. subunit I of the known cyanobacterial aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase. The heme D, on the other hand, seems to form a spectrally distinguished, yet kinetically ill-defined hemoprotein complex which does not qualify as a fully functional d-type terminal oxidase on our (wild-type) cyanobacteria even after growth under semianaerobic pseudo-reducing conditions. Also growth (of Anabaena and Nostoc) under dinitrogen-fixing conditions did not change this situation. Thus, we are left with (wild-type) cyanobacteria forming an unbranched respiratory chain with only a single type of terminal oxidase protein, viz. the known aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase. This oxidase, however, may incorporate different prosthetic (heme) groups in the sense of "heme promiscuity." Biosynthesis of the different heme groups thereby seems to respond to the ambient redox environment. In particular, however, conditions for expression of the two quinol oxidases potentially and additionally coded for by the genome of, e. g., Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 (see http://www.kazusa.or.jp/cyano), have not yet been found.  相似文献   

16.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a toxic gas encountered by bacteria as a product of their own metabolism or as a result of a host immune response. Non-toxic concentrations of NO have been shown to initiate changes in bacterial behaviors such as the transition between planktonic and biofilm-associated lifestyles. The heme nitric oxide/oxygen binding proteins (H-NOX) are a widespread family of bacterial heme-based NO sensors that regulate biofilm formation in response to NO. The presence of H-NOX in several human pathogens combined with the importance of planktonic–biofilm transitions to virulence suggests that H-NOX sensing may be an important virulence factor in these organisms. Here we review the recent data on H-NOX NO signaling pathways with an emphasis on H-NOX homologs from pathogens and commensal organisms. The current state of the field is somewhat ambiguous regarding the role of H-NOX in pathogenesis. However, it is clear that H-NOX regulates biofilm in response to environmental factors and may promote persistence in the environments that serve as reservoirs for these pathogens. Finally, the evidence that large subgroups of H-NOX proteins may sense environmental signals besides NO is discussed within the context of a phylogenetic analysis of this large and diverse family.  相似文献   

17.
Heme Nitric oxide/OXygen binding (H-NOX) domains have provided a novel scaffold to probe ligand affinity in hemoproteins. Mutation of isoleucine 5, a conserved residue located in the heme-binding pocket of the H-NOX domain from Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis (Tt H-NOX), was carried out to examine changes in oxygen (O(2))-binding properties. A series of I5 mutants (I5F, I5F/I75F, I5F/L144F, I5F/I75F/L144F) were investigated to probe the role of steric bulk within the heme pocket. The mutations significantly increased O(2) association rates (1.5-2.5-fold) and dissociation rates (8-190-fold) as compared to wild-type Tt H-NOX. Structural changes that accompanied the I5F mutation were characterized using X-ray crystallography and resonance Raman spectroscopy. A 1.67 ? crystal structure of the I5F mutant indicated that introducing a phenylalanine at position 5 resulted in a significant shift of the N-terminal domain of the protein, causing an opening of the heme pocket. This movement also resulted in an increased amount of flexibility at the N-terminus and the loop covering the N-terminal helix as indicated by the two conformations of the first six N-terminal amino acids, high B-factors in this region of the protein, and partially discontinuous electron density. In addition, introduction of a phenylalanine at position 5 resulted in increased flexibility of the heme within the pocket and weakened hydrogen bonding to the bound O(2) as measured by resonance Raman spectroscopy. This study provides insight into the critical role of I5 in controlling conformational flexibility and ligand affinity in H-NOX proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Xu C  Ibrahim M  Spiro TG 《Biochemistry》2008,47(8):2379-2387
Determinants of the Fe-CO and C-O stretching frequencies in (imidazole)heme-CO adducts have been investigated via density functional theory (DFT) analysis, in connection with puzzling characteristics of the heme sensor protein CooA and of the H-NOX (Heme-Nitric Oxide and/or OXygen binding) family of proteins, including soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). The computations show that two mechanisms of Fe-histidine bond weakening have opposite effects on the nuFeC/nuCO pattern. Mechanical tension is expected to raise nuFeC with little change in nuCO whereas the weakening of H-bond donation from the imidazole ligand has the opposite effect. Data on CooA indicate imidazole H-bond weakening associated with heme displacement, as part of the activation mechanism. The computations also reveal that protein-induced distortion of the porphyrin ring, a prominent structural feature of the H-NOX protein TtTar4H (Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis Tar4 protein heme domain), has surprisingly little effect on nuFeC or nuCO. However, another structural feature, strong H-bonding to the propionates, is suggested to account for the weakened back bonding that is evident in sGC. TtTar4H-CO itself has an elevated nuFeC, which is successfully modeled as a compression effect, resulting from steric crowding in the distal pocket. nuFeC/nuCO data, in conjunction with modeling, can provide valuable insight into mechanisms for heme-protein modulation.  相似文献   

19.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a nitric oxide- (NO-) sensing hemoprotein that has been found in eukaryotes from Drosophila to humans. Prokaryotic proteins with significant homology to the heme domain of sGC have recently been identified through genomic analysis. Characterization of two of these proteins is reported here. The first is a 181 amino acid protein cloned from Vibrio cholerae (VCA0720) that is encoded in a histidine kinase-containing operon. The ferrous unligated form of VCA0720 is 5-coordinate, high-spin. The CO complex is low-spin, 6-coordinate, and the NO complex is high-spin and 5-coordinate. These ligand-binding properties are very similar to those of sGC. The second protein is the N-terminal 188 amino acids of Tar4 (TtTar4H), a predicted methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) from the strict anaerobe Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis. TtTar4H forms a low-spin, 6-coordinate ferrous-oxy complex, the first of this sGC-related family that binds O2. TtTar4H has ligand-binding properties similar to those of the heme-containing O2 sensors such as AxPDEA1. sGC does not bind O2 despite having a porphyrin with a histidyl ligand like the globins. The results reported here, with sequence-related proteins from prokaryotes but in the same family as the sGC heme domain, show that these proteins have evolved to discriminate between ligands such as NO and O2; hence, we term this family H-NOX domains (heme-nitric oxide/oxygen).  相似文献   

20.
Soluble guanylate cyclases (sGCs) function as heme sensors that selectively bind nitric oxide (NO), triggering reactions essential to animal physiology. Recent discoveries place sGCs in the H-NOX family (heme nitric oxide/oxygen-binding domain), which includes bacterial proteins from aerobic and anaerobic organisms. Some H-NOX proteins tightly bind oxygen (O2), whereas others show no measurable affinity for O2, providing the basis for selective NO signaling in aerobic cells. Using a series of wild-type and mutant H-NOXs, we established a molecular basis for ligand discrimination. A distal pocket tyrosine is requisite for O2 binding in the H-NOX family. These data suggest that sGC uses a kinetic selection against O2; we propose that the O2 dissociation rate in the absence of this tyrosine is fast and that a stable O2 complex does not form.  相似文献   

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