An Order-Disorder Transition Plays a Role in Switching Off the Root Effect in Fish Hemoglobins |
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Authors: | Alessandro Vergara Luigi Vitagliano Antonello Merlino Filomena Sica Katia Marino Cinzia Verde Guido di Prisco Lelio Mazzarella |
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Affiliation: | From the ‡Department of Chemistry, University of Naples “Federico II,” Naples I-80126, Italy.;the §Istituto di Biostrutture e Bioimmagini, CNR, Naples I-80134, Italy, and ;the ¶Institute of Protein Biochemistry, CNR, Naples I-80131, Italy |
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Abstract: | The Root effect is a widespread property among fish hemoglobins whose structural basis remains largely obscure. Here we report a crystallographic and spectroscopic characterization of the non-Root-effect hemoglobin isolated from the Antarctic fish Trematomus newnesi in the deoxygenated form. The crystal structure unveils that the T state of this hemoglobin is stabilized by a strong H-bond between the side chains of Asp95α and Asp101β at the α1β2 and α2β1 interfaces. This unexpected finding undermines the accepted paradigm that correlates the presence of this unusual H-bond with the occurrence of the Root effect. Surprisingly, the T state is characterized by an atypical flexibility of two α chains within the tetramer. Indeed, regions such as the CDα corner and the EFα pocket, which are normally well ordered in the T state of tetrameric hemoglobins, display high B-factors and non-continuous electron densities. This flexibility also leads to unusual distances between the heme iron and the proximal and distal His residues. These observations are in line with Raman micro-spectroscopy studies carried out both in solution and in the crystal state. The findings here presented suggest that in fish hemoglobins the Root effect may be switched off through a significant destabilization of the T state regardless of the presence of the inter-aspartic H-bond. Similar mechanisms may also operate for other non-Root effect hemoglobins. The implications of the flexibility of the CDα corner for the mechanism of the T-R transition in tetrameric hemoglobins are also discussed. |
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Keywords: | Allosteric Regulation Evolution Hemoglobin Protein Structure Spectroscopy X-ray Crystallography |
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