Abstract

Time courses for NO, O2, CO, methyl and ethyl isocyanide rebinding to native and mutant sperm whale myoglobins were measured at 20 degrees C following 17-ns and 35-ps laser excitation pulses. His64 (E7) was replaced with Gly, Val, Leu, Phe, and Gln, and Val68 (E11) was replaced with Ala, Ile, and Phe. For both NO and O2, the effective picosecond quantum yield of unliganded geminate intermediates was roughly 0.2 and independent of the amino acids at positions 64 and 68. Geminate recombination of NO was very rapid; 90% rebinding occurred within 0.5-1.0 ns for all of the myoglobins examined; and except for the Gly64 and Ile68 mutants, the fitted recombination rate parameters were little influenced by the size and polarity of the amino acid at position 64 and the size of the residue at position 68. The rates of NO recombination and ligand movement away from the iron atom in the Gly64 mutant increased 3-4-fold relative to native myoglobin. For Ile68 myoglobin, the first geminate rate constant for NO rebinding decreased approximately 6-fold, from 2.3 x 10(10) s-1 for native myoglobin to 3.8 x 10(9) s-1 for the mutant. No picosecond rebinding processes were observed for O2, CO, and isocyanide rebinding to native and mutant myoglobins; all of the observed geminate rate constants were less than or equal to 3 x 10(8) s-1. The rebinding time courses for these ligands were analyzed in terms of a two-step consecutive reaction scheme, with an outer kinetic barrier representing ligand movement into and out of the protein and an inner barrier representing binding to the heme iron atom by ligand occupying the distal portion of the heme pocket. Substitution of apolar amino acids for His64 decreased the absolute free energies of the outer and inner kinetic barriers and the well for non-covalently bound O2 and CO by 1 to 1.5 kcal/mol, regardless of size. In contrast, the His64 to Gln mutation caused little change in the barrier heights for all ligands, showing that the polar nature of His64 inhibits both the bimolecular rate of ligand entry into myoglobin and the unimolecular rate of binding to the iron atom from within the protein. Increasing the size of the position 68(E11) residue in the series Ala to Val (native) to Ile caused little change in the rate of O2 migration into myoglobin or the equilibrium constant for noncovalent binding but did decrease the unimolecular rate for iron-O2 bond formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

Highlights

  • IntroductionTime courses for NO, 02, CO, methyl and ethyl isocyanide rebinding to native and mutant sperm whale myoglobins were measured at 20 “C following 17-ns and 35-ps laser excitation pulses

  • We have examined the physiological roles of the distal pocket histidine and valine in sperm whale myoglobin by measuring the overall rate and equilibrium constants for ligand binding to 14 different single and double mutants at Kinetic Barriers in Myoglobin positions 64(E7)’ and 68(Ell) (Springer et al, 1989; Rohlfs et al, 1990; Egeberg et al, 1990)

  • The polarity of the imidazole side chain inhibits the rate of entry into the distal pocket, decreases the equilibrium constant for the non-covalent binding of apolar ligands, and raises the inner kinetic barrier for bond formation with the heme iron atom

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Time courses for NO, 02, CO, methyl and ethyl isocyanide rebinding to native and mutant sperm whale myoglobins were measured at 20 “C following 17-ns and 35-ps laser excitation pulses. Was replaced with Ala, Ile, and Phe. was replaced with Ala, Ile, and Phe For both NO and OZ, the effective picosecond quantum yield of unliganded geminate intermediates was roughly 0.2 and independent of the amino acids at positions 64 and. Geminate recombination of NO was very rapid; 90% rebinding occurred within 0.5-1.0 ns for all of the myoglobins examined; and except for the Glys and. Ile”mutants, the fitted recombination rate parameters were little influenced by the size and polarity of the amino acid at position 64 and the size of the residue at position 68. The rates of NO recombination and ligand movement away from the iron atom in the Glye mutant increased 3-4-fold relative to native myoglobin.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call