Abstract

As shown by singular value decomposition and global analysis of the absorption spectra, oxidation of nitrosylmyoglobin, MbFe(II)NO, by oxygen occurs in two consecutive (pseudo) first-order reactions in aqueous air- saturated solutions at physiological conditions (pH 7.0, I=0.16 m (NaCl)). Both reaction steps have a large temperature dependence with the following activation parameters: DeltaS++(1) = 121+/-7 and DeltaS++(1) = 23+/-29; and DeltaS++(2) = 88+/-14 kJ mol(-1) and DeltaS++(2)-63+/-51 J(-1) K(-1) mol(-1) at 25 degrees C for the first and second step, respectively. At physiological temperature, the initial reaction is faster, while at lower temperatures, the first reaction is slower and rate-determining. The rate of the first reaction is linearly dependent on oxygen pressure at lower pressures, while for oxygen pressures above atmospheric, the rate exhibits saturation behaviour. The second reaction is independent of oxygen pressure. The rate of the second reaction increases when oxymyoglobin is added. In contrast, the rate of the first reaction is independent of the presence of oxymyoglobin. The observed kinetics are in agreement with a reaction mechanism in which the nitric oxide that is initially bound to the Fe(II) centre of myoglobin is displaced by oxygen in a reversible ligand-exchange reaction prior to an irreversible electron transfer. The ligand-exchange process is dissociative in nature and depends bond breaking, and nitric oxide is suggested to be trapped in a protein cavity. The absorption spectrum of the intermediate, as resolved from the global analysis, is in agreement with a peroxynitrite complex, and the initial process must involve partial electron transfer.

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