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Differential Control of Heme Reactivity in Alpha and Beta Subunits of Hemoglobin: A Combined Raman Spectroscopic and Computational Study
Author(s) -
Eric M. Jones,
Emanuele Monza,
Gurusamy Balakrishnan,
George C. Blouin,
Piotr J. Mak,
Qianhong Zhu,
James R. Kincaid,
Vı́ctor Guallar,
Thomas G. Spiro
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/ja503328a
Subject(s) - chemistry , alpha (finance) , beta (programming language) , heme , hemoglobin , raman spectroscopy , reactivity (psychology) , differential (mechanical device) , hemeprotein , biochemistry , enzyme , medicine , physics , alternative medicine , pathology , optics , construct validity , nursing , engineering , computer science , patient satisfaction , programming language , aerospace engineering
The use of hybrid hemoglobin (Hb), with mesoheme substituted for protoheme, allows separate monitoring of the α or β hemes along the allosteric pathway. Using resonance Raman (rR) spectroscopy in silica gel, which greatly slows protein motions, we have observed that the Fe-histidine stretching frequency, νFeHis, which is a monitor of heme reactivity, evolves between frequencies characteristic of the R and T states, for both α or β chains, prior to the quaternary R-T and T-R shifts. Computation of νFeHis, using QM/MM and the conformational search program PELE, produced remarkable agreement with experiment. Analysis of the PELE structures showed that the νFeHis shifts resulted from heme distortion and, in the α chain, Fe-His bond tilting. These results support the tertiary two-state model of ligand binding (Henry et al., Biophys. Chem. 2002, 98, 149). Experimentally, the νFeHis evolution is faster for β than for α chains, and pump-probe rR spectroscopy in solution reveals an inflection in the νFeHis time course at 3 μs for β but not for α hemes, an interval previously shown to be the first step in the R-T transition. In the α chain νFeHis dropped sharply at 20 μs, the final step in the R-T transition. The time courses are fully consistent with recent computational mapping of the R-T transition via conjugate peak refinement by Karplus and co-workers (Fischer et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2011, 108, 5608). The effector molecule IHP was found to lower νFeHis selectively for α chains within the R state, and a binding site in the α1α2 cleft is suggested.

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