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Showing papers by "Jonathan B. Wittenberg published in 2000"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the heme pocket of the wild type Synechocystis Hb has a unique structure that requires a histidine residue at the E10 position for the formation of its native structure.
Abstract: A putative hemoglobin (Hb) gene, related to those previously characterized in the green alga Chlamydomonas eugametos, the ciliated protozoan Paramecium caudatum, the cyanobacterium Nostoc commune and the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was recently discovered in the complete genome sequence of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803. In this paper, we report the purification of Synechocystis Hb and describe some of its salient biochemical and spectroscopic properties. We show that the recombinant protein contains Fe-protoporphyrin IX and forms a very stable complex with oxygen. The oxygen dissociation rate measured, 0.011 s 21 , is among the smallest known and is four orders of magnitude smaller than the rate measured for N. commune Hb, which suggests functional differences between these Hbs. Optical and resonance Raman spectroscopic study of the structure of the heme pocket of Synechocystis Hb reveals that the heme is 6-coordinate and low-spin in both ferric and ferrous forms in the pH range 5.5‐10.5. We present evidence that His46, predicted to occupy the helical position E10 based on amino-acid sequence comparison, is involved in the formation of the ferric and ferrous 6-coordinate low-spin structures. The analysis of the His46Ala mutant shows that the ferrous form is 5-coordinate and high-spin and the ferric form contains a 6-coordinate high-spin component in which the sixth ligand is most probably a water molecule. We conclude that the heme pocket of the wild type Synechocystis Hb has a unique structure that requires a histidine residue at the E10 position for the formation of its native structure.

100 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ligand binding kinetics and resonance Raman spectroscopy are used to characterize the effect of the distal pocket residues of Paramecium Hb in stabilizing the heme-bound ligands and suggest hydrogen bonding stabilization of bound oxygen.
Abstract: The unicellular protozoan Paramecium caudatum contains a monomeric hemoglobin (Hb) that has only 116 amino acid residues. This Hb shares the simultaneous presence of a distal E7 glutamine and a B10 tyrosine with several invertebrate Hbs. In the study presented here, we have used ligand binding kinetics and resonance Raman spectroscopy to characterize the effect of the distal pocket residues of Paramecium Hb in stabilizing the heme-bound ligands. In the ferric state, the high-spin to low-spin (aquo-hydroxy) transition takes place with a pK(a) of approximately 9.0. The oxygen affinity (P(50) = 0.45 Torr) is similar to that of myoglobin. The oxygen on- and off-rates are also similar to those of sperm whale myoglobin. Resonance Raman data suggest hydrogen bonding stabilization of bound oxygen, evidenced by a relatively low frequency of Fe-OO stretching (563 cm(-1)). We propose that the oxy complex is an equilibrium mixture of a hydrogen-bonded closed structure and an open structure. Oxygen will dissociate preferentially from the open structure, and therefore, the fraction of open structure population controls the rate of oxygen dissociation. In the CO complex, the Fe-CO stretching frequency at 493 cm(-1) suggests an open heme pocket, which is consistent with the higher on- and off-rates for CO relative to those in myoglobin. A high rate of ligand binding is also consistent with the observation of an Fe-histidine stretching frequency at 220 cm(-1), indicating the absence of significant proximal strain. We postulate that the function of Paramecium Hb is to supply oxygen for cellular oxidative processes.

64 citations