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The Mechanism of Biochemical NO-Sensing: Insights from Computational Chemistry
Authors:Ahmed M Rozza  Marcell Papp  Neil R McFarlane  Prof Jeremy N Harvey  Dr Julianna Oláh
Institution:1. Department of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, 1111 Budapest Műegyetem rakpart 3., Hungary;2. Department of Chemistry, KU Leuven, 3001 Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200 f- box 2404, Belgium
Abstract:The binding of small gas molecules such as NO and CO plays a major role in the signaling routes of the human body. The sole NO-receptor in humans is soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) – a histidine-ligated heme protein, which, upon NO binding, activates a downstream signaling cascade. Impairment of NO-signaling is linked, among others, to cardiovascular and inflammatory diseases. In the present work, we use a combination of theoretical tools such as MD simulations, high-level quantum chemical calculations and hybrid QM/MM methods to address various aspects of NO binding and to elucidate the most likely reaction paths and the potential intermediates of the reaction. As a model system, the H-NOX protein from Shewanella oneidensis (So H-NOX) homologous to the NO-binding domain of sGC is used. The signaling route is predicted to involve NO binding to form a six-coordinate intermediate heme-NO complex, followed by relatively facile His decoordination yielding a five-coordinate adduct with NO on the distal side with possible isomerization to the proximal side through binding of a second NO and release of the first one. MD simulations show that the His sidechain can quite easily rotate outward into solvent, with this motion being accompanied in our simulations by shifts in helix positions that are consistent with this decoordination leading to significant conformational change in the protein.
Keywords:bioinorganic chemistry  computational chemistry  molecular dynamics  quantum chemistry  signal transduction
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