Abstract

The alpha or Q0,0 absorption band of horse iron(II) cytochrome c splits and shifts to the blue as temperature decreases over the temperature range of 290-10 K. At room temperature, its maximum is at 18 150 cm-1 and the spectral width is 273 cm-1, whereas at 10 K, the two bands of the Q0,0 transition occur at 18 364 and 18 253 cm-1 and the width of the lowest-energy band is 96 cm-1. Temperature dependent splitting also occurs for zinc cytochrome c, a derivative in which Fe has been replaced by Zn; at 10 K, the peaks in the Q0,0 band region occur at 17 106 and 16 996 cm-1. The peak positions are independent of the cryosolvent (aqueous ethylene glycol or glycerol mixtures). The splitting of the Q0,0 band seen in the protein (approximately 110 cm-1 for iron and zinc cytochrome c) is comparable to the crystal field splitting observed for metalloporphyrins in mixed crystals. In contrast, the Q0,0 band of zinc coproporphyrin III in a glassy solvent (dimethylformamide/ethylene glycol) or in poly(vinyl chloride) shows a blue shift with temperature decrease but no evidence of Q0,0 splitting. Available spectral data show that the Q0,0 band is composed of two nearly degenerate electronic transitions and the split is due to the asymmetry in the heme pocket of the protein that arises from the surrounding polypeptide chain. This asymmetry results in the stabilization of one form of the excited state over the other, according to a Jahn-Teller mechanism.

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