Abstract

To study the engineering requirements for proton pumping in energy-converting enzymes such as cytochrome c oxidase, the thermodynamics and mechanisms of proton-coupled electron transfer in two designed heme proteins are elucidated. Both heme protein maquettes chosen, heme b-[H10A24]2 and heme b-[delta7-His]2, are four-alpha-helix bundles that display pH-dependent heme midpoint potential modulations, or redox-Bohr effects. Detailed equilibrium binding studies of ferric and ferrous heme b with these maquettes allow the individual contributions of heme-protein association, iron-histidine ligation, and heme-protein electrostatics to be elucidated. These data demonstrate that the larger, less well-structured [H10A24]2 binds heme b in both oxidation states tighter than the smaller and more well-structured [Delta7-His]2 due to a stronger porphyrin-protein hydrophobic interaction. The 66 mV (1.5 kcal/mol) difference in their heme reduction potentials observed at pH 8.0 is due mostly to stabilization of ferrous heme in [H10A24]2 relative to [delta7-His]2. The data indicate that porphyrin-protein hydrophobic interactions and heme iron coordination are responsible for the Kd value of 37 nM for the heme b-[delta7-His]2 scaffold, while the affinity of heme b for [H10A24]2 is 20-fold tighter due to a combination of porphyrin-protein hydrophobic interactions, iron coordination, and electrostatic effects. The data also illustrate that the contribution of bis-His coordination to ferrous heme protein affinity is limited, <3.0 kcal/mol. The 1H+/1e- redox-Bohr effect of heme b-[H10A24]2 is due to the greater absolute stabilization of the ferric heme (4.1 kcal/mol) compared to the ferrous heme (1.4 kcal/mol) binding upon glutamic acid deprotonation, i.e., an electrostatic response mechanism. The 2H+/1e- redox-Bohr effect observed for heme b-[delta7-His]2 is due to histidine protonation and histidine dissociation of ferrous heme b upon reduction, i.e., a ligand loss mechanism. These results indicate that the contribution of porphyrin-protein hydrophobic interactions to heme affinity is critical to maintaining the heme bound in both oxidation states and eliciting an electrostatic response from these designed heme protein scaffolds.

Full Text
Paper version not known

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