Literature DB >> 2555518

Structural and electronic properties of the liver fluke heme cavity by nuclear magnetic resonance and optical spectroscopy. Evidence for a distal tyrosine residue in a normally functioning hemoglobin.

J T Lecomte1, J D Smit, K H Winterhalter, G N La Mar.   

Abstract

Structural features of the heme and the heme cavity of the monomeric hemoglobin (Hb) from the platyhelminth Dicrocoelium dendriticum were investigated by optical and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Using nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) from resonances assigned previously through isotope labeling, most hyperfine-shifted resonances could be attributed to individual heme and protein protons in the cyano-metHb complex. It was observed that the heme 2-vinyl group is held in the trans orientation by nearby residues, whereas the 4-vinyl group exhibits an equilibrium between cis and trans orientations. NOE experiments in 1H2O allowed the identification of exchangeable protons belonging to the proximal histidine residue (F8) and to a distal residue. Detailed analysis of the NOE patterns obtained from the distal labile proton to non-labile protons and among these latter protons leads to the conclusion that a tyrosine side-chain occupies the distal site E7. Optical spectra of the alkaline-metHb also lead to this view, in that they are not typical of a hydroxy-metHb complex but instead resemble that of a hemin-phenolate or human mutant (M-type) Hb with a tyrosine residue linked to the iron atom. Further evidence for a distal tyrosine residue stems from the occurrence of an unusually stable transient ferrous Hb-cyanide complex, formed upon reduction of cyano-metHb to deoxy-Hb with dithionite. We suggest that the stability of this intermediate is due to a slow re-orientation of a large distal side-chain prior to cyanide dissociation. The sequence of the E-helix, known from the partially determined primary structure, was realigned to accommodate these findings. A frame-shift by one residue now positions a tyrosine at the distal site E7 instead of the originally proposed glycine residue.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2555518     DOI: 10.1016/0022-2836(89)90275-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  2 in total

1.  Trematode hemoglobins show exceptionally high oxygen affinity.

Authors:  L Kiger; A K Rashid; N Griffon; M Haque; L Moens; Q H Gibson; C Poyart; M C Marden
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  1998-08       Impact factor: 4.033

2.  Replacing the axial ligand tyrosine 75 or its hydrogen bond partner histidine 83 minimally affects hemin acquisition by the hemophore HasAp from Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Authors:  Ritesh Kumar; Hirotoshi Matsumura; Scott Lovell; Huili Yao; Juan C Rodríguez; Kevin P Battaile; Pierre Moënne-Loccoz; Mario Rivera
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2014-03-26       Impact factor: 3.162

  2 in total

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