Abstract

Heme oxygenase (HO) catalyzes the first steps in the breakdown of heme to biliverdin and carbon monoxide. It is a membrane-bound protein that has been shown to exist in two isoforms, HO-1 and HO-2. Recently, a soluble, truncated form of rat HO-1 (rHO) lacking the 23 amino-acid membrane anchor has been expressed in E. coli. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) data on ferric rHO and its fluoride derivative support assignment of the axial iron ligands as oxygen and/or nitrogen donors having distances similar to ferric myoglobin. The electronic absorption and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the ferric and ferrous protoheme complexes of rHO as well as various ligand adducts are very similar to the corresponding spectra of myoglobin. The present study is the first investigation of the heme-heme oxygenase complex with EXAFS and MCD spectroscopy and establishes that the proximal ligand to the heme in rHO is histidine. Furthermore, the close similarity between the electronic absorption and MCD spectra of ferric rHO and myoglobin over the pH range 6 to 10 is consistent with distal heme ligation of ferric rHO as a water molecule or hydroxide ion, depending on pH. Taken together and in conjunction with the results of earlier studies, EXAFS, electronic absorption, and MCD spectroscopy solidly establish that the ligands to the heme in rHO are identical to those in myoglobin, namely, histidine/H 2O at low pH and histidine/OH at high pH.

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