Vibrational Dynamics of Carbon Monoxide at the Active Sites of Mutant Heme Proteins
Author(s) -
Jeffrey R. Hill,
Dana D. Dlott,
Chris W. Rella,
Kristen A. Peterson,
Sean M. Decatur,
Steven G. Boxer,
M. D. Fayer
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1541-5740
pISSN - 0022-3654
DOI - 10.1021/jp9605414
Subject(s) - chemistry , heme , carbon monoxide , anharmonicity , myoglobin , hemeprotein , hydrogen bond , molecular dynamics , active site , protein dynamics , crystallography , chemical physics , photochemistry , computational chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , enzyme , catalysis
Picosecond mid-IR pump-probe measurements of vibrational relaxation (VR) of CO bound to the active sites of wild-type and mutant myoglobins (Mb) reveal that an approximately linear relationship exists between the protein matrix-induced CO frequency shift and the VR rate. This relation parallels a similar linear relationship seen in a series of heme model compounds where Fe was replaced by Ru and Os. The VR rate of CO in the Mb is sensitive only to the magnitude of protein-induced carbonyl frequency shifts and apparently is not sensitive to the specific details of how the shift is induced, e.g., hydrogen bonding to CO or electrostatic interactions in the heme pocket. CO VR is insensitive to substantial changes in protein structure that do not affect the CO vibrational frequency. These observations suggest that the mechanism of carbon monoxide VR in heme proteins such as Mb occurs by through--bond anharmonic coupling, which, as shown in prior work, is also the dominant coupling in the model compounds. The experiments indicate that differing protein structures influence VR of CO bound at the active site not by opening and closing channels for vibrational energy flow from CO to the protein but by affecting the rate of energy flow from CO to heme. The rates are determined by the extent of back-bonding, which determines the magnitude of through--bond anharmonic coupling between CO and heme. The back-bonding and, therefore, the extent of anharmonic coupling are influenced by the electric fields in the heme pocket, which likely differ in the proteins studied here.
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