ferric heme
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2021 ◽  
pp. 101549
Author(s):  
David A. Hanna ◽  
Courtney M. Moore ◽  
Liu Liu ◽  
Xiaojing Yuan ◽  
Iramofu M. Dominic ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 478 (4) ◽  
pp. 927-942
Author(s):  
Wilford Tse ◽  
Nathan Whitmore ◽  
Myles R. Cheesman ◽  
Nicholas J. Watmough

Nitrite binding to recombinant wild-type Sperm Whale myoglobin (SWMb) was studied using a combination of spectroscopic methods including room-temperature magnetic circular dichroism. These revealed that the reactive species is free nitrous acid and the product of the reaction contains a nitrite ion bound to the ferric heme iron in the nitrito- (O-bound) orientation. This exists in a thermal equilibrium with a low-spin ground state and a high-spin excited state and is spectroscopically distinct from the purely low-spin nitro- (N-bound) species observed in the H64V SWMb variant. Substitution of the proximal heme ligand, histidine-93, with lysine yields a novel form of myoglobin (H93K) with enhanced reactivity towards nitrite. The nitrito-mode of binding to the ferric heme iron is retained in the H93K variant again as a thermal equilibrium of spin-states. This proximal substitution influences the heme distal pocket causing the pKa of the alkaline transition to be lowered relative to wild-type SWMb. This change in the environment of the distal pocket coupled with nitrito-binding is the most likely explanation for the 8-fold increase in the rate of nitrite reduction by H93K relative to WT SWMb.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 549
Author(s):  
Ephrahime S. Traore ◽  
Jiasong Li ◽  
Tapiwa Chiura ◽  
Jiafeng Geng ◽  
Ankita J. Sachla ◽  
...  

HupZ is an expected heme degrading enzyme in the heme acquisition and utilization pathway in Group A Streptococcus. The isolated HupZ protein containing a C-terminal V5-His6 tag exhibits a weak heme degradation activity. Here, we revisited and characterized the HupZ-V5-His6 protein via biochemical, mutagenesis, protein quaternary structure, UV–vis, EPR, and resonance Raman spectroscopies. The results show that the ferric heme-protein complex did not display an expected ferric EPR signal and that heme binding to HupZ triggered the formation of higher oligomeric states. We found that heme binding to HupZ was an O2-dependent process. The single histidine residue in the HupZ sequence, His111, did not bind to the ferric heme, nor was it involved with the weak heme-degradation activity. Our results do not favor the heme oxygenase assignment because of the slow binding of heme and the newly discovered association of the weak heme degradation activity with the His6-tag. Altogether, the data suggest that the protein binds heme by its His6-tag, resulting in a heme-induced higher-order oligomeric structure and heme stacking. This work emphasizes the importance of considering exogenous tags when interpreting experimental observations during the study of heme utilization proteins.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erwin G. Abucayon ◽  
Jia-Min Chu ◽  
Megan Ayala ◽  
Rahul L. Khade ◽  
Yong Zhang ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

The dominant stabilization forces in the observed ferrous N-coordination, and ferric O-coordination, of nitrosoarenes to hemes are provided by dπ–pπ* and dσ–pπ* interactions, respectively.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (36) ◽  
pp. 21914-21920 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camila Bacellar ◽  
Dominik Kinschel ◽  
Giulia F. Mancini ◽  
Rebecca A. Ingle ◽  
Jérémy Rouxel ◽  
...  

The structure–function relationship is at the heart of biology, and major protein deformations are correlated to specific functions. For ferrous heme proteins, doming is associated with the respiratory function in hemoglobin and myoglobins. Cytochromec(Cyt c) has evolved to become an important electron-transfer protein in humans. In its ferrous form, it undergoes ligand release and doming upon photoexcitation, but its ferric form does not release the distal ligand, while the return to the ground state has been attributed to thermal relaxation. Here, by combining femtosecond Fe Kαand KβX-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) with Fe K-edge X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES), we demonstrate that the photocycle of ferric Cyt c is entirely due to a cascade among excited spin states of the iron ion, causing the ferric heme to undergo doming, which we identify. We also argue that this pattern is common to a wide diversity of ferric heme proteins, raising the question of the biological relevance of doming in such proteins.


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