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Evidence for hydrogen bonding of bound dioxygen to the distal histidine of oxycobalt myoglobin and haemoglobin

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TLDR
R resonance Raman spectra of the oxy forms of cobalt–porphyrin-substituted myoglobin and haemoglobin recorded in buffered H2O and D2O solutions indicate that the bound oxygen in oxyCoMb and in both subunits of oxyCoHb interacts with the adjacent exchangeable proton, and confirms the formation of a hydrogen bond between the boundoxy and the distal histidine.
Abstract
The origin of the differences in oxygen binding energy in various haemoglobins and myoglobins has long been debated. Perutz1 proposed that the haem-coordinated histidine (proximal histidine) strains the haem iron in low affinity globins but relaxes it in high affinity globins. The existence of such tension in T-structure deoxyhaemoglobin (deoxyHb) was recently confirmed by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)2,3, resonance Raman4,5 and NMR6 spectroscopy. Although its contribution to the free energy of cooperativity is insignificant in the deoxy state, the tension at the haem is considered to be ∼1 kcal mol−1 for the ligated form in which the haem iron moves into the porphyrin plane7. The remaining free energy is probably stored in other parts of the molecule. Therefore, a study of the stabilization mechanisms of the oxygenated form became increasingly important. A hydrogen bond between the bound oxygen and the distal histidine has been proposed by Pauling8; this would be expected to stabilize the oxy form of the protein and could contribute to the regulation of the oxygen affinity through the oxygen dissociation rate. A series of EPR and functional studies on various cobalt-substituted monomeric haemoglobins and myoglobins suggested the presence of such hydrogen bonding8–12 and it has recently been established in crystals of oxy iron myoglobin (oxyFeMb)13 and in oxyhaemoglobin14. Here we present resonance Raman spectra of the oxy forms of cobalt–porphyrin-substituted myoglobin and haemoglobin (CoMb and CoHb) recorded in buffered H2O and D2O solutions at 406.7 nm excitation. Only the Raman lines corresponding to the O—O stretching mode of the bound oxygen15, appearing near 1,130 cm−1, are shifted (2–5 cm−1) on replacement of H2O by D2O; no other vibrations, including the Co—O2 stretching mode, exhibit any frequency shifts. This indicates that the bound oxygen in oxyCoMb and in both subunits of oxyCoHb interacts with the adjacent exchangeable proton, and confirms the formation of a hydrogen bond between the bound oxygen and the distal histidine9.

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Functional analogues of cytochrome c oxidase, myoglobin, and hemoglobin.

TL;DR: The majority of modern organisms, including many prokaryotes, are aerobes; that is, they use molecular oxygen as the terminal electron acceptor for energy generation, and the four-electron, four-proton reduction of O2 to H2O (reaction 1) dominates.
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Oxygen Activation and Radical Transformations in Heme Proteins and Metalloporphyrins

TL;DR: This review surveys the range of O2 activation processes mediated by heme proteins and model compounds with a focus on recent progress in the characterization and reactivity of important iron–oxygen intermediates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nature of the Fe-O2 bonding in oxy-myoglobin: effect of the protein.

TL;DR: Valence bond (VB) analysis of the CASSCF/MM wave function unequivocally supports the Weiss bonding mechanism, showing how the protein or the axial ligand of the oxyheme complex can determine the nature of its bonding in terms of the blend of the three bonding models: Weiss, Pauling, and McClure-Goddard.
Journal ArticleDOI

Signals for the selection of a splice site in Pre-mRNA: computer analysis of splice junction sequences and like sequences

TL;DR: It is found that the higher the homology of a candidate donor site sequence to the nine-nucleotide consensus sequence, the higher is its probability of being a donor site and the surrounding nucleotide sequence alone is not generally sufficient for the selection.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stereochemistry of cooperative effects in haemoglobin.

TL;DR: The oxygenation of haemoglobin is accompanied by structural changes in the subunits triggered by shifts of the iron atoms relative to the porphyrin and, in the β-subunits, also by the steric effect of oxygen itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neutron diffraction reveals oxygen-histidine hydrogen bond in oxymyoglobin.

TL;DR: It is reported here that the imidazole stabilizes bound molecular oxygen with a hydrogen bond, as revealed by neutron diffraction analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nature of the Iron–Oxygen Bond in Oxyhæmoglobin

Linus Pauling
- 11 Jul 1964 - 
TL;DR: J. J. WEISS1 has proposed that oxyhâmoglobin is a hæmoglobin peroxide, with the iron atom in the ferric state and the oxygen molecule present as an O−2 ion, which is then taken up in the co-ordination shell of the ferrous ion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on cobalt myoglobins and hemoglobins. I. Preparation and optical properties of myoglobins and hemoglobins containing cobalt proto-, meso-, and deuteroporphyrins and thermodynamic characterization of their reversible oxygenation.

TL;DR: Thermochemical comparison of oxygenation parameters of iron- and cobalt-containing oxygen carriers indicates that the effect of the metal substitution on the oxygen affinity is primarily enthalpic, whereas theeffect of the apoprotein binding on theoxy affinity of cobaltous porphyrins is essentially entropic.
Journal ArticleDOI

The iron–oxygen bond in human oxyhaemoglobin

TL;DR: The stereochemistry of the haem–oxygen complex in human oxyHb, as determined by single-crystal X-ray analysis, is reported, suggesting that the hydrogen bond is weaker than in oxyMb7.
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