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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Magnetization curves of haemoproteins measured by low-temperature magnetic-circular-dichroism spectroscopy.

A J Thomson, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1980 - 
- Vol. 191, Iss: 2, pp 411-420
TLDR
The magnetization curves of the S = 1/2 proteins were analysed and it is shown that it is possible to make estimates of the ground-state g-factors even in the presence of rhombic anisotropy, provided that some knowledge of the polarizations of the electronic transitions is available.
Abstract
The magnetic-circular-dichroism (m.c.d.) spectra of methymyoglobin cyanide and oxidized horse heart cytochrome c were measured in the region of the Soret band over a range of temperatures from 1.5 to 50 K and in fields from 0 to 5T. A similar study has been made with reduced bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase, which contains one high-spin ferrous haem, namely a3. M.c.d. magnetization curves characteristic of an isolated Kramer's ground state with spin S = 1/2. These curves contrast with the magnetization curve of the high-spin ferrous haem with spin S = 2. The electronic ground state of the latter compound contains zero-field components that are thermally accessible over the temperature range of the experiment. Hence the magnetization curves are a complex nested set. The magnetization curves of the S = 1/2 proteins were analysed and it is shown that it is possible to make estimates of the ground-state g-factors even in the presence of rhombic anisotropy, provided that some knowledge of the polarizations of the electronic transitions is available. The striking difference between the m.c.d. magnetization curves of a simple S = 1/2 paramagnet and magnetically complex ground state should prove extremely useful when m.c.d. spectroscopy is sued to probe the magentic properties of metal centres in proteins, and should have wide application beyond the field of haemoproteins.

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Citations
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Copper Active Sites in Biology

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Application of MCD spectroscopy to porphyrinoids

TL;DR: Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy has proven invaluable in the assignment of the optical spectra of the porphyrinoids over the last 40 years as mentioned in this paper.
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Magnetic spectroscopic (EPR, ESEEM, Mössbauer, MCD and NMR) studies of low-spin ferriheme centers and their corresponding heme proteins

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Three-iron clusters in iron-sulfur proteins

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electronic Spectrum of Single Crystals of Ferricytochrome-c

TL;DR: The absorption spectrum of crystalline horse‐heart ferricytochrome‐c was investigated and the Soret band and main visible band were found to have the same polarization, while the weaker band at 5650 A is polarized differently.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single‐Crystal Spectra of Ferrimyoglobin Complexes in Polarized Light

TL;DR: The results confirm many general features of porphyrin spectra such as the polarization of the B and Q states, the vibronic nature of the Qv state, and the intensity imbalance in the Q0 state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electronic state of heme in cytochrome oxidase III. The magnetic susceptibility of beef heart cytochrome oxidase and some of its derivatives from 7-200 K. Direct evidence for an antiferromagnetically coupled Fe (III)/Cu (II) pair.

TL;DR: The temperature dependence of the paramagnetic susceptibility of cytochrome oxidase and some of its derivatives has been measured from 7 to 200 K and a fully consistent picture of the magnetic centers in cyto chrome oxidase now appears to be available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of the principal g-tensors in single crystals of ferrimyoglobin complexes.

TL;DR: This paper describes a method of determining the directions of the principal axes of the g-tensors in single crystals from measurements of theg-value variation in three crystalline planes (ab, bc*, ac) and of the Principal values of g-Tensors.
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