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1.
Heme oxygenase (HO) catalyzes heme catabolism through three successive oxygenation steps where the substrate heme itself activates O2. Although a rate-determining step of the HO catalysis is considered as third oxygenation, the verdoheme degradation mechanism has been the least understood in the HO catalysis. In order to discriminate three possible pathways proposed for the verdoheme ring-opening, we have examined reactions of the verdoheme-HO-1 complex with alkyl peroxides, namely MeOOH. Under reducing conditions, the MeOOH reaction afforded two novel products whose absorption spectra are similar to but slightly different from that of biliverdin. HPLC, ESI-MS, and NMR analysis show that these products are 1- and 19-methoxy-deoxy-biliverdins. The addition of a methoxy group at one end of the linear tetrapyrrole unambiguously indicates transient formation of the Fe-OOMe intermediate and rearrangement of its terminal methoxy group to the alpha-pyrrole carbon. The corresponding OH transfer of the Fe-OOH species is highly probable in the H2O2-dependent verdoheme degradation and is likely to be the case in the O2-dependent reaction catalyzed by HO as well.  相似文献   

2.
The (13)C pulsed ENDOR and NMR study of [meso-(13)C-TPPFe(OCH(3))(OO(t)Bu)](-) performed in this work shows that although the unpaired electron in low-spin ferrihemes containing a ROO(-) ligand resides in a d(pi) orbital at 8 K, the d(xy) electron configuration is favored at physiological temperatures. The variable temperature NMR spectra indicate a dynamic situation in which a heme with a d(pi) electron configuration and planar porphyrinate ring is in equilibrium with a d(xy) electron configuration that has a ruffled porphyrin ring. Because of the similarity in the EPR spectra of the hydroperoxide complexes of heme oxygenase, cytochrome P450, and the model heme complex reported herein, it is possible that these two electron configurations and ring conformations may also exist in equilibrium in the enzymatic systems. The ruffled porphyrinate ring would aid the attack of the terminal oxygen of the hydroperoxide intermediate of heme oxygenase (HO) on the meso-carbon, and the large spin density at the meso-carbons of a d(xy) electron configuration heme suggests the possibility of a radical mechanism for HO. The dynamic equilibrium between the ruffled (d(xy)) and planar (d(pi)) conformers observed in the model complexes also suggests that a flexible heme binding cavity may be an important structural motif for heme oxygenase activity.  相似文献   

3.
Mutation of His-39, one of the axial ligands in rat outer mitochondrial membrane cytochrome b(5) (OM cyt b(5)), to Val produces a mutant (H39V) capable of carrying out the oxidation of heme to biliverdin when incubated with hydrazine and O(2). The reaction proceeds via the formation of an oxyferrous complex (Fe(II)(-)O(2)) that is reduced by hydrazine to a ferric hydroperoxide (Fe(III)(-)OOH) species. The latter adds a hydroxyl group to the porphyrin to form meso-hydroxyheme. The observation that catalase does not inhibit the oxidation of the heme in the H39V mutant is consistent with the formation of a coordinated hydroperoxide (Fe(III)(-)OOH), which in heme oxygenase is the precursor of meso-hydroxyheme. By comparison, mutation of His-63, the other axial ligand in OM cyt b(5), to Val results in a mutant (H63V) capable of oxidizing heme to verdoheme in the absence of catalase. However, the oxidation of heme by H63V is completely inhibited by catalase. Furthermore, whereas the incubation of Fe(III)(-)H63V with H(2)O(2) leads to the nonspecific degradation of heme, the incubation of Fe(II)(-)H63V with H(2)O(2) results in the formation of meso-hydroxyheme, which upon exposure to O(2) is rapidly converted to verdoheme. These findings revealed that although meso-hydroxyheme is formed during the degradation of heme by the enzyme heme oxygenase or by the process of coupled oxidation of model hemes and hemoproteins not involved in heme catabolism, the corresponding mechanisms by which meso-hydroxyheme is generated are different. In the coupled oxidation process O(2) is reduced to noncoordinated H(2)O(2), which reacts with Fe(II)-heme to form meso-hydroxyheme. In the heme oxygenation reaction a coordinated O(2) molecule (Fe(II)(-)O(2)) is reduced to a coordinated peroxide molecule (Fe(III)(-)OOH), which oxidizes heme to meso-hydroxyheme.  相似文献   

4.
The azide complexes of heme oxygenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (pa-HO) and Neisseriae meningitidis (nm-HO) have been studied with the aid of (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy. These complexes have been shown to exist as an equilibrium mixture of two populations, one exhibiting an S = (1)/(2), (d(xy))(2)(d(xz), d(yz))(3) electron configuration and planar heme and a second with a novel S = (3)/(2), (d(xz), d(yz))(3)(d(xy))(1)(d(z)(2))(1) spin state and nonplanar heme. At physiologically relevant temperatures, the equilibrium shifts in the direction of the population exhibiting the latter electron configuration and nonplanar heme, whereas at temperatures approaching the freezing point of water, the equilibrium shifts in the direction of the population with the former electronic structure and planar heme. These findings indicate that the microenvironment of the distal pocket in heme oxygenase is unique among heme-containing proteins in that it lowers the sigma-donating (field strength) ability of the distal ligand and, therefore, promotes the attainment of heme electronic structures thus far only observed in heme oxygenase. When the field strength of the distal ligand is slightly lower than that of azide, such as OH(-) (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2003, 125, 11842), the corresponding complex exists as a mixture of populations with nonplanar hemes and electronic structures that place significant spin density at the meso positions. The ease with which these unusual heme electronic structures are attained by heme oxygenase is likely related to activation of meso carbon reactivity which, in turn, facilitates hydroxylation of a meso carbon by the obligatory ferric hydroperoxide intermediate.  相似文献   

5.
The origin of the unusual regioselectivity of heme oxygenation, i.e. the oxidation of heme to delta-biliverdin (70%) and beta-biliverdin (30%), that is exhibited by heme oxygenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (pa-HO) has been studied by (1)H NMR, (13)C NMR, and resonance Raman spectroscopies. Whereas resonance Raman indicates that the heme-iron ligation in pa-HO is homologous to that observed in previously studied alpha-hydroxylating heme oxygenases, the NMR spectroscopic studies suggest that the heme in this enzyme is seated in a manner that is distinct from that observed for all other alpha-hydroxylating heme oxygenase enzymes for which a structure is known. In pa-HO, the heme is rotated in-plane approximately 110 degrees, so the delta-meso-carbon of the major orientational isomer is located within the HO-fold in the place where the alpha-hydroxylating enzymes typically place the alpha-meso-carbon. The unusual heme seating displayed by pa-HO places the heme propionates so that these groups point in the direction of the solvent-exposed heme edge and appears to originate in large part from the absence of stabilizing interactions between the polypeptide and the heme propionates, which are typically found in alpha-hydroxylating heme oxygenase enzymes. These interactions typically involve Lys-16 and Tyr-112, in Neisseriae meningitidis HO, and Lys-16 and Tyr-134, in human and rat HO-1. The corresponding residues in pa-HO are Asn-19 and Phe-117, respectively. In agreement with this hypothesis, we found that the Asn-19 Lys/Phe-117 Tyr double mutant of pa-HO exists as a mixture of molecules exhibiting two distinct heme seatings; one seating is identical to that exhibited by wild-type pa-HO, whereas the alternative seating is very similar to that typical of alpha-hydroxylating heme oxygenase enzymes and is related to the wild-type seating by approximately 110 degrees in-plane rotation of the heme. Furthermore, each of these heme seatings in the pa-HO double mutant gives rise to a subset of two heme isomeric orientations that are related to each other by 180 degrees rotation about the alpha-gamma-meso-axis. The coexistence of these molecules in solution, in the proportions suggested by the corresponding area under the peaks in the (1)H NMR spectrum, explains the unusual regioselectivity of heme oxygenation observed with the double mutant, which we found produces alpha- (55%), delta- (35%), and beta-biliverdin (10%). Alpha-biliverdin is obtained by oxidation of the heme seated similar to that of alpha-hydroxylating enzymes, whereas beta- and delta-biliverdin are formed from the oxidation of heme seated as in wild-type pa-HO.  相似文献   

6.
13C NMR spectroscopic studies have been conducted with the hydroxide complex of Pseudomonas aeruginosa heme oxygenase (Fe(III)-OH), where OH(-) has been used as a model of the OOH(-) ligand to gain insights regarding the elusive ferric hydroperoxide (Fe(III)-OOH) intermediate in heme catabolism at ambient temperatures. Analysis of the heme core carbon resonances revealed that the coordination of hydroxide in the distal site of the enzyme results in the formation of at least three populations of Fe(III)-OH complexes with distinct electronic configurations and nonplanar ring distortions that are in slow exchange relative to the NMR time scale. The most abundant population exhibits a spin crossover between S = (1)/(2) and S = (3)/(2) spin states, and the two less abundant populations exhibit pure, S = (3)/(2) and S = (1)/(2), (d(xy)())(1) electronic configurations. We propose that the highly organized network of water molecules in the distal pocket of heme oxygenase, by virtue of donating a hydrogen bond to the coordinated hydroxide ligand, lowers its ligand field strength, thereby increasing the field strength of the porphyrin (equatorial) ligand, which results in nonplanar deformations of the macrocycle. This tendency to deform from planarity, which is imparted by the ligand field strength of the coordinated OH(-), is likely reinforced by the flexibility of the distal pocket in HO. These findings suggest that if the ligand field strength of the coordinated OOH(-) in heme oxygenase is modulated in a similar manner, the resultant large spin density at the meso carbons and nonplanar deformations of the pophyrin ring prime the macrocycle to actively participate in its own hydroxylation.  相似文献   

7.
Fujii H  Yoshida T 《Inorganic chemistry》2006,45(17):6816-6827
Studies of the 13C and 15N NMR paramagnetic shifts of the iron-bound cyanides in the ferric cyanide forms of various heme proteins containing the proximal histidine and related model complexes are reported. The paramagnetic shifts of the 13C and 15N NMR signals of the iron-bound cyanide are not significantly affected by the substitution of the porphyrin side chains. On the other hand, the paramagnetic shifts of both the 13C and 15N NMR signals decrease with an increase in the donor effect of the proximal ligand, and the 13C NMR signal is more sensitive to a modification of the donor effect of the proximal ligand than the 15N NMR signal. With the tilt of the iron-imidazole bond, the paramagnetic shift of the 13C NMR signal increases, whereas that of the 15N NMR signal decreases. The hydrogen-bonding interaction of the iron-bound cyanide with a solvent decreases the paramagnetic shift of both 13C and 15N NMR signals, and the effect is more pronounced for the 15N NMR signal. Data on the 13C and 15N NMR signals of iron-bound cyanide for various heme proteins are also reported and analyzed in detail. Substantial differences in the 13C and 15N NMR shifts for the heme proteins can be explained on the basis of the results for the model complexes and structures around the heme in the heme proteins. The findings herein show that the paramagnetic shift of the 13C NMR signal of the iron-bound cyanide is a good probe to estimate the donor effect of the proximal imidazole and that the ratio of 15N/13C NMR shifts allows the hydrogen-bonding interaction on the distal side to be estimated.  相似文献   

8.
To address the role of the secondary hydroxyl group of heme a/o in heme-copper oxidases, we incorporated Fe(III)-2,4 (4,2) hydroxyethyl vinyl deuterioporphyrin IX, as a heme o mimic, into the engineered heme-copper center in myoglobin (sperm whale myoglobin L29H/F43H, called Cu(B)Mb). The only difference between the heme b of myoglobin and the heme o mimic is the substitution of one of the vinyl side chains of the former with a hydroxyethyl group of the latter. This substitution resulted in an approximately 4 nm blue shift in the Soret band and approximately 20 mV decrease in the heme reduction potential. In a control experiment, the heme b in Cu(B)Mb was also replaced with a mesoheme, which resulted in an approximately 13 nm blue shift and approximately 30 mV decrease in the heme reduction potential. Kinetic studies of the heme o mimic-substituted Cu(B)Mb showed significantly different reactivity toward copper-dependent oxygen reduction from that of the b-type Cu(B)Mb. In reaction with O2, Cu(B)Mb with a native heme b showed heme oxygenase activity by generating verdoheme in the presence of Cu(I). This heme degradation reaction was slowed by approximately 19-fold in the heme o mimic-substituted Cu(B)Mb (from 0.028 s(-1) to 0.0015 s(-1)), while the mesoheme-substituted Cu(B)Mb shared a similar heme degradation rate with that of Cu(B)Mb (0.023 s(-1)). No correlation was found between the heme reduction potential and its O2 reactivity. These results strongly suggest the critical role of the hydroxyl group of heme o in modulating heme-copper oxidase activity through participation in an extra hydrogen-bonding network.  相似文献   

9.
13CN ion appears to have the greatest potential to probe the heme environment of the ferric heme proteins; however, a resonance of the iron-bound (13)CN ion in ferric heme proteins has not yet been located. We show here the first detection of (13)C NMR signals of the iron-bound (13)CN for heme proteins and their model complexes in an unexpectedly large upfield region. This study demonstrates that the (13)C NMR signal of the iron-bound (13)CN is a sensitive probe to study the nature of the proximal ligand in ferric heme protein.  相似文献   

10.
Despite the wealth of information that has been obtained from the study of paramagnetic hemes and heme proteins by 1H NMR spectroscopy, there are certain limitations imposed by the nature of paramagnetically affected resonances that are difficult to overcome. Although it has long been recognized that 13C NMR spectroscopy is likely to be a powerful complementary technique to overcome some of these limitations, the low sensitivity and low natural abundance of 13C nuclei has resulted in a lag in the application of 13C NMR spectroscopy to the study of paramagnetic hemes and heme proteins. The tremendous advances in methodology and instrumentation witnessed in the NMR field, coupled to the advent of recombinant DNA methods that have made possible the preparation and purification of significant quantities of proteins, and the biosynthesis of 13C-labeled heme, have contributed to an increased interest in the study of paramagnetic heme active sites by 13C NMR spectroscopy. As a consequence, 13C NMR spectroscopy is emerging as a powerful tool to study heme electronic structure and structure–function relationships in heme-containing proteins. In this report we strive to summarize some of the recent developments in the analysis of paramagnetic hemes and heme-containing proteins by 13C NMR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

11.
The ferrous alpha-verdoheme-cytochrome b(5) complex, [Fe(II)(verdoheme)](+), has been prepared and characterized spectroscopically. Anaerobic addition of excess sodium dithionite to [Fe(II)(verdoheme)](+) at pH 10 produces a one-electron-reduced species with spectroscopic characteristics that suggest a ferrous hexacoordinated verdoheme pineutral radical best formulated as a [Fe(II)(verdoheme*)] --> [Fe(I)(verdoheme)] resonance hybrid. At lower pH values (7.0 and 8.0) the one-electron-reduced species is shown to disproportionate to produce the resting state [Fe(II)(verdoheme)](+) complex and the two-electron-reduced [Fe(II)(verdoheme:)](-) anion. The latter might also be formulated as a resonance hybrid [Fe(I)(verdoheme*)](-) --> [Fe(II)(verdoheme:)](-). The disproportionation reaction becomes very slow as the pH is raised above 9.0. Exposure of the one-electron- or two-electron-reduced verdoheme complexes of cytochrome b(5) to O(2) results in rapid and quantitative reoxidation to the resting state [Fe(II)(verdoheme)](+) complex.  相似文献   

12.
Intraprotein interdomain electron transfer (IET) from flavin mononucleotide (FMN) to heme is essential in nitric oxide (NO) synthesis by NO synthase (NOS). Our previous laser flash photolysis studies have provided a direct determination of the kinetics of IET between the FMN and heme domains in truncated oxyFMN constructs of rat neuronal NOS (nNOS) and murine inducible NOS (iNOS), in which only the oxygenase and FMN domains along with the calmodulin (CaM) binding site are present [Feng, C. J.; Tollin, G.; Holliday, M. A.; Thomas, C.; Salerno, J. C.; Enemark, J. H.; Ghosh, D. K. Biochemistry 2006, 45, 6354-6362. Feng, C. J.; Thomas, C.; Holliday, M. A.; Tollin, G.; Salerno, J. C.; Ghosh, D. K.; Enemark, J. H. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 3808-3811]. Here, we report the kinetics of IET between the FMN and heme domains in a rat nNOS holoenzyme in the presence and absence of added CaM using laser flash photolysis of CO dissociation in comparative studies on partially reduced NOS and a single domain NOS oxygenase construct. The IET rate constant in the presence of CaM is 36 s-1, whereas no IET was observed in the absence of CaM. The kinetics reported here are about an order of magnitude slower than the kinetics in a rat nNOS oxyFMN construct with added CaM (262 s-1). We attribute the slower IET between FMN and heme in the holoenzyme to the additional step of dissociation of the FMN domain from the reductase complex before reassociation with the oxygenase domain to form the electron-transfer competent output state complex. This work provides the first direct measurement of CaM-controlled electron transfer between catalytically significant redox couples of FMN and heme in a nNOS holoenzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Solution 1H NMR is used to probe the environments of the donor protons of eight strong hydrogen bonds on the distal side of the heme substrate in the cyanide-inhibited, substrate-bound complex of human heme oxygenase, hHO. It is demonstrated that significant magnetization transfer from the bulk water signal to the eight labile protons does not result from chemical exchange, but from direct nuclear Overhauser effect due to the dipolar interaction of these labile protons with "ordered" water molecules. The enzyme labile proton to water proton distances are estimated at approximately 3 A. It is proposed that the role of the strong hydrogen-bonding network is to immobilize numerous water molecules which both stabilize the activated hydroperoxy species and funnel protons to the active site.  相似文献   

14.
Summary. A closely hemin-analogous corrphycene derivative was prepared in good overall yield. By spectroscopic measurements it was shown that it complexes with the stress protein heme oxygenase and apomyoglobin in a similar way as hemin. However, due to its molecular structure it is not attacked by heme oxygenase, but is able to block this enzyme to some degree. In addition, the complex with apomyoglobin displays oxygen and carbon monoxide ligation comparable to myoglobin. These properties make this novel corrphycene derivative a candidate to be used as heme oxygenase blocker or otherwise as a blood pigment substitute.Received July 15, 2003; accepted September 5, 2003 Published online October 23, 2003  相似文献   

15.
Evidence is presented demonstrating that the magnitudes of the 13C chemical shifts originating from heme meso carbons provide a straightforward diagnostic tool to elucidate the coordination state of high-spin heme proteins and enzymes. Pentacoordinate high-spin heme centers exhibit 13C meso shifts centered at approximately 250 ppm, whereas their hexacoordinate counterparts exhibit 13C shifts centered at approximately -80 ppm. The relatively small spectral window (400 to -100 ppm) covering the meso-13C shifts, the relatively narrow lines of these resonances, and the availability of biosynthetic methods to prepare 13C-labeled heme (Rivera, M.; Walker, F. A. Anal. Biochem. 1995, 230, 295-302) make this approach practical. The theoretical basis for the distinct chemical shifts observed for meso carbons from hexacoordinate high-spin hemes relative to their pentacoordinate counterparts are now well understood (Cheng, R.-J.; Chen, P. Y.; Lovell, T.; Liu, T.; Noodleman, L.; Case, D. A. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2003, 125, 6774-6783), which indicates that the magnitude of the meso-carbon chemical shifts can be used as a simple and reliable diagnostic tool for determining the coordination state of the heme active sites, independent of the nature of the proximal ligand. Proof of the principle for the 13C NMR spectroscopic approach is demonstrated using hexa- and pentacoordinate myoglobin. Subsequently, 13C NMR spectroscopy has been used to unambiguously determine that a recently discovered heme protein from Shigella dysenteriae (ShuT) is pentacoordinate.  相似文献   

16.
5,15-Dioxaporphyrin ( DOP ) is a novel meso-oxaporphyrin analogue and exhibits unique 20π-antiaromaticity, unlike its mother congener of 18π-aromatic 5-oxaporphyrin, commonly known as its cationic iron complex called verdohem, which is a key intermediate of heme catabolism. To reveal its reactivities and properties as an oxaporphyrin analogue, the oxidation of tetra-β-arylated DOP ( DOP-Ar4 ) was explored in this study. Stepwise oxidation from the 20π-electron neutral state was achieved, and the corresponding 19π-electron radical cation and 18π-electron dication were characterized. Further oxidation of the 18π-aromatic dication resulted in the formation of a ring-opened dipyrrindione product by hydrolysis. Considering a similar reaction of verdoheme to ring-opened biliverdin in the heme degradation in nature, the current result consolidates the ring-opening reactivity of oxaporphyrinium cation species.  相似文献   

17.
18.
We report a density functional theory study on the heme metabolism in heme oxygenase using iron-hydroperoxo and -oxo models. The activation energies for heme oxidation at the alpha-carbon by the iron-hydroperoxo and -oxo species are calculated to be 42.9 and 39.9 kcal/mol, respectively. These high activation barriers lead us to reconsider the catalytic mechanism of heme oxygenase  相似文献   

19.
A concise synthesis of the 2,4-dimethyldeuteroporphyrin regiospecifically labeled with 13C at the α-meso site was developed. The starting material of ethyl 3,4,5-trimethylpyrrole-2-carboxylate was first converted to a 13C-labeled 5,5′-dimethyldipyrromethene with 13C formic acid, and the resulting dipyrromethene was coupled with 5,5′-dibromodipyrromethene to afford the 13C-labeled porphyrin in 26% yield. The paramagnetic 13C NMR measurements of myoglobin with the inversion-recovery method allowed us to detect selectively the α-meso-carbon signal of the iron complex. The heme is symmetric about the α,γ-meso carbon axis to prevent the orientational disorder in protein pocket. These results indicate that the 13C-enriched 2,4-dimethyldeuteroporphyrin is a new promising tool to elucidate the structure-function relationship of many hemoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
The structure of a complex between heme(Fe(3+)) and a parallel G-quadruplex DNA formed from a single repeat sequence of the human telomere, d(TTAGGG), has been characterized by (1)H NMR. The study demonstrated that the heme(Fe(3+)) is sandwiched between the 3'-terminal G-quartets of the G-quadruplex DNA. Hence, the net +1 charge of the heme(Fe(3+)) in the complex is surrounded by the eight carbonyl oxygen atoms of the G-quartets. Interaction between the heme Fe(3+) and G-quartets in the complex was clearly manifested in the solvent (1)H/(2)H isotope effect on the NMR parameters of paramagnetically shifted heme methyl proton signals, and interaction of the heme Fe(3+) with the eight carbonyl oxygen atoms of the two G-quartets was shown to provide a strong and axially symmetric ligand field surrounding the heme Fe(3+), yielding a heme(Fe(3+)) low-spin species with a highly symmetric heme electronic structure. This finding provides new insights as to the design of the molecular architecture and functional properties of various heme-DNA complexes.  相似文献   

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