Abstract

The recently identified nonsymbiotic hemoglobin gene MtGlb1-2 of the legume Medicago truncatula possesses unique properties as it generates four alternative splice forms encoding proteins with one or two heme domains. Here we investigate the ligand binding kinetics of MtGlb1-2.1 and MtGlb1-2.4, bearing two hemes and one heme, respectively. Unexpectedly, the overall time-course of ligand rebinding was unusually fast. Thus, we complemented nanosecond laser flash photolysis kinetics with data collected with a hybrid femtosecond–nanosecond pump–probe setup. Most photodissociated ligands are rebound geminately within a few nanoseconds, which leads to rates of the bimolecular rebinding to pentacoordinate species in the 108 M−1s−1 range. Binding of the distal histidine to the heme competes with CO rebinding with extremely high rates (kh ~ 105 s−1). Histidine dissociation from the heme occurs with comparable rates, thus resulting in moderate equilibrium binding constants (KH ~ 1). The rate constants for ligation and deligation of distal histidine to the heme are the highest reported for any plant or vertebrate globin. The combination of microscopic rates results in unusually high overall ligand binding rate constants, a fact that contributes to explaining at the mechanistic level the extremely high reactivity of these proteins toward the physiological ligands oxygen, nitric oxide and nitrite.

Highlights

  • Plant hemoglobins were first discovered in the root nodules of legumes

  • Concentration-independent rebinding is evident on the short nanosecond time scale, followed by a CO concentration-dependent rebinding phase on the microsecond time scale

  • Ligand rebinding kinetics of the model diatomic ligand CO reveal unusual properties that may be fundamental to sustain the high reactivity toward multisubstrate reactions

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Summary

Introduction

Plant hemoglobins were first discovered in the root nodules of legumes They were termed leghemoglobins and shown to be able to oxygenate reversibly. We know that hemoglobins are widespread in nonsymbiotic tissues of all plants (for reviews, see [2,3,4,5,6,7]). These nonsymbiotic hemoglobins ( called phytoglobins (Glbs)) can be categorized into three classes according to phylogenetic analyses and biochemical properties [6,7,8,9,10]. Only a few Glbs of classes 2 and 3 have been characterized at the biophysical level

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