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Ligand pathways in myoglobin: A review of trp cavity mutations
Author(s) -
Olson J. S.,
Soman J.,
Phillips G. N.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
iubmb life
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.132
H-Index - 113
eISSN - 1521-6551
pISSN - 1521-6543
DOI - 10.1080/15216540701230495
Subject(s) - myoglobin , heme , ligand (biochemistry) , chemistry , histidine , fragment molecular orbital , stereochemistry , biophysics , active site , side chain , crystallography , receptor , biochemistry , biology , molecule , molecular orbital , amino acid , enzyme , organic chemistry , polymer
The pathways for ligand entry and exit in myoglobin have now been well established by a wide variety of experimental results, including pico‐ to nano‐ to microsecond transient absorbance measurements and time‐resolved X‐ray crystallographic measurements. Trp insertions have been used to block, one at a time, the three major cavities occupied by photodissociated ligands. In this work, we review the effects of the L29(B10)W mutation, which places a large indole ring in the initial 'docking site' for photodissociated ligands. Then, the effects of blocking the Xe4 site with I28W, V68W, and I107W mutations and the Xe1 cavity with L89W, L104W, and F138W mutations are described. The structures of four of these mutants are shown for the first time (Trp28, Trp68, Trp107, and Trp 138 sperm whale metMb). All available results support a 'side path' mechanism in which ligands move into and out of myoglobin by outward rotation of the HisE7 side chain, but after entry can migrate into internal cavities, including the distal Xe4 and proximal Xe1 binding sites. The distal cavities act like the pocket of a baseball glove, catching the ligand and holding it long enough for the histidine gate to close and facilitate internal coordination with the heme iron atom. The physiological role of the proximal Xe1 site is less clear because changes in the size of this cavity have minimal effects on overall O2 binding parameters.