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I. C. Gunsalus

Bio: I. C. Gunsalus is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carbon monoxide & Myoglobin. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 1523 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nonexponential rebinding observed at low temperatures and in solid samples implies that the innermost barrier has a spectrum of activation energies, similar to how myoglobin achieves specificity and order.
Abstract: Myoglobin rebinding of carbon monoxide and dioxygen after photodissociation has been observed in the temperature range between 40 and 350 K. A system was constructed that records the change in optical absorption at 436 nm smoothly and without break between 2 musec and 1 ksec. Four different rebinding processes have been found. Between 40 and 160 K, a single process is observed. It is not exponential in time, but approximately given by N(t) = (1 + t/to)-n, where to and n are temperature-dependent, ligand-concentration independent, parameters. At about 170 K, a second and at 200 K, a third concentration-independent process emerge. At 210 K, a concentration-dependent process sets in. If myoglobin is embedded in a solid, only the first three can be seen, and they are all nonexponential. In a liquid glycerol-water solvent, rebinding is exponential. To interpret the data, a model is proposed in which the ligand molecule, on its way from the solvent to the binding site at the ferrous heme iron, encounters four barriers in succession. The barriers are tentatively identified with known features of myoglobin. By computer-solving the differential equation for the motion of a ligand molecule over four barriers, the rates for all important steps are obtained. The temperature dependences of the rates yield enthalpy, entropy, and free-energy changes at all barriers. The free-energy barriers at 310 K indicate how myoglobin achieves specificity and order. For carbon monoxide, the heights of these barriers increase toward the inside; carbon monoxide consequently is partially rejected at each of the four barriers. Dioxygen, in contrast, sees barriers of about equal height and moves smoothly toward the binding site. The entropy increases over the first two barriers, indicating a rupturing of bonds or displacement of residues, and then smoothly decreases, reaching a minimum at the binding site. The magnitude of the decrease over the innermost barrier implies participation of heme and/or protein. The nonexponential rebinding observed at low temperatures and in solid samples implies that the innermost barrier has a spectrum of activation energies. The shape of the spectrum has been determined; its existence can be explained by assuming the presence of many conformational states for myoglobin. In a liquid at temperatures above about 230 K, relaxation among conformational states occurs and rebinding becomes exponential.

1,448 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a model is proposed in which the carbon monoxide, moving from the solvent to the binding site at the ferrous heme iron, encounters two successive barriers.
Abstract: Protoheme rebinding of carbon monoxide after photodissociation has been observed at temperatures from 5 to 340 K for times from 2 μs to 1 ks. Below 80 K, binding is nonexponential in time and CO‐concentration independent, above 230 K exponential and the rate is CO‐concentration proportional. A model is proposed in which the carbon monoxide, moving from the solvent to the binding site at the ferrous heme iron, encounters two successive barriers. The outer is formed by the solvent, the inner is a property of the heme and probably connected to the motion of the iron from the spin‐2 deoxy to the spin‐0 carbon monoxide state. The temperature dependence of the two processes yields all activation enthalpies and entropies for the two barriers. The nonexponential rebinding observed at low temperatures implies that the inner barrier possesses distributed activation enthalpy and entropy. The enthalpy spectrum and the entropy spread are determined. The spectrum demonstrates that heme exists in many different conformational states. At low temperatures, these states are frozen; above about 230 K, rapid conformational relaxation renders rebinding exponential. Below 15 K, quantum‐mechanical molecular tunneling dominates. The tunneling rate yields the width of the innermost barrier. Earlier experiments on carbon monoxide binding to myoglobin had provided evidence for four barriers. The present results imply that the innermost barrier in myoglobin is caused by the heme, the outermost by the solvent, and the two intermediate ones by the globin.

111 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
13 Dec 1991-Science
TL;DR: The concepts that emerge from studies of the conformational substates and the motions between them permit a quantitative discussion of one simple reaction, the binding of small ligands such as carbon monoxide to myoglobin.
Abstract: Recent experiments, advances in theory, and analogies to other complex systems such as glasses and spin glasses yield insight into protein dynamics. The basis of the understanding is the observation that the energy landscape is complex: Proteins can assume a large number of nearly isoenergetic conformations (conformational substates). The concepts that emerge from studies of the conformational substates and the motions between them permit a quantitative discussion of one simple reaction, the binding of small ligands such as carbon monoxide to myoglobin.

2,902 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Fractional dynamics has experienced a firm upswing during the past few years, having been forged into a mature framework in the theory of stochastic processes as mentioned in this paper, and a large number of research papers developing fractional dynamics further, or applying it to various systems have appeared since our first review article on the fractional Fokker-Planck equation.
Abstract: Fractional dynamics has experienced a firm upswing during the past few years, having been forged into a mature framework in the theory of stochastic processes. A large number of research papers developing fractional dynamics further, or applying it to various systems have appeared since our first review article on the fractional Fokker–Planck equation (Metzler R and Klafter J 2000a, Phys. Rep. 339 1–77). It therefore appears timely to put these new works in a cohesive perspective. In this review we cover both the theoretical modelling of sub- and superdiffusive processes, placing emphasis on superdiffusion, and the discussion of applications such as the correct formulation of boundary value problems to obtain the first passage time density function. We also discuss extensively the occurrence of anomalous dynamics in various fields ranging from nanoscale over biological to geophysical and environmental systems.

2,119 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Dec 2007-Nature
TL;DR: The dream is to 'watch' proteins in action in real time at atomic resolution, which requires addition of a fourth dimension, time, to structural biology so that the positions in space and time of all atoms in a protein can be described in detail.
Abstract: Because proteins are central to cellular function, researchers have sought to uncover the secrets of how these complex macromolecules execute such a fascinating variety of functions. Although static structures are known for many proteins, the functions of proteins are governed ultimately by their dynamic character (or 'personality'). The dream is to 'watch' proteins in action in real time at atomic resolution. This requires addition of a fourth dimension, time, to structural biology so that the positions in space and time of all atoms in a protein can be described in detail.

2,109 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Jun 1977-Nature
TL;DR: The dynamics of a folded globular protein have been studied by solving the equations of motion for the atoms with an empirical potential energy function and suggest that the protein interior is fluid-like in that the local atom motions have a diffusional character.
Abstract: The dynamics of a folded globular protein (bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor) have been studied by solving the equations of motion for the atoms with an empirical potential energy function. The results provide the magnitude, correlations and decay of fluctuations about the average structure. These suggest that the protein interior is fluid-like in that the local atom motions have a diffusional character.

1,840 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental evidence supports a new molecular recognition paradigm for processes as diverse as signaling, catalysis, gene regulation and protein aggregation in disease, which has the potential to significantly impact views and strategies in drug design, biomolecular engineering and molecular evolution.
Abstract: Molecular recognition is central to all biological processes. For the past 50 years, Koshland's 'induced fit' hypothesis has been the textbook explanation for molecular recognition events. However, recent experimental evidence supports an alternative mechanism. 'Conformational selection' postulates that all protein conformations pre-exist, and the ligand selects the most favored conformation. Following binding the ensemble undergoes a population shift, redistributing the conformational states. Both conformational selection and induced fit appear to play roles. Following binding by a primary conformational selection event, optimization of side chain and backbone interactions is likely to proceed by an induced fit mechanism. Conformational selection has been observed for protein-ligand, protein-protein, protein-DNA, protein-RNA and RNA-ligand interactions. These data support a new molecular recognition paradigm for processes as diverse as signaling, catalysis, gene regulation and protein aggregation in disease, which has the potential to significantly impact our views and strategies in drug design, biomolecular engineering and molecular evolution.

1,699 citations