Abstract
Picosecond time-resolved polarization spectroscopy is used to study relaxation dynamics in myoglobin following photoelimination of CO from carbonmonoxymyoglobin. Evolution of the transient circular dichroism signal of the N band of myoglobin (probed at 355 nm) to that characteristic of equilibrium myoglobin requires approximately 300 ps. This time scale is significantly longer than that corresponding to the photoinitiated bond cleavage. Transient linear dichroism of the Soret band and picosecond time-resolved magnetic circular dichroism measurements of the Q band demonstrate that the circular dichroism kinetics do not result from either time-dependent changes in the orientation of the transition moments of the heme ring or the doming of the heme that accompanies the out-of-plane motion of the iron. Finally, transient absorption data of the near-IR optical transition of photogenerated myoglobin suggest that the circular dichroism data are not a measure of the tilting of the proximal histidine. The circular dichroism data are discussed in terms of a relaxation in the tertiary structure of the protein following dissociation.
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