Structural and Electronic Properties of the Heme Cofactors in a Multi-Heme Synthetic Cytochrome
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 35 (11) , 3429-3438
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi952662k
Abstract
Resonance Raman, absorption, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectra are reported for a water soluble, synthetic cytochrome. The protein is a variant of the cytochrome beta maquette described by Robertson et al. [Robertson, D. E., et al. (1995) Nature 368, 425-432] and is composed of 62 amino acid residues arranged in a di-alpha-helical unit which dimerizes in solution to form a four-helix bundle. Each di-alpha-helical unit contains histidine residues at the 10,10' positions which serve as ligands to the hemes. When protoheme IX is incorporated, both hemes in the dimer are bis-ligated and low spin. The two hemes are inequivalent with respect to both binding affinity and redox properties. To investigate the properties of the heme cofactors, spectroscopic studies were conducted on peptides reconstituted with protoheme IX (PHa) and several related variants. These hemes include 2-vinyldeuteroheme (2-VDH), 4-vinyldeuteroheme (4-VDH), protoheme III (PHs), and 1-methyl-2-oxomesoheme XIII (2-OMH). Collectively, the spectroscopic studies reveal the following: (1) 2-VDH, 4-VDH, and 2-OMH bind to the protein and form bis-ligated low-spin complexes similar to PHa. The structures of the two hemes in the dimers are identical as are the immediate protein environments around the bound cofactors. These results indicate that the redox inequivalence of the two hemes is due to heme-heme electronic interactions rather than structural and/or environmental differences between the two cofactors. (2) The two hemes in the dimer are arranged in a edge-to-edge arrangement wherein the oxo group (2-OMH) or the vinyl group(s) are in the hydrophobic interface between the two units which comprise the dimer. The propionic acid tails point outward toward the hydrophilic region and extend into the solvent. (3) The PHs protein differs from the other synthetic proteins in that it contains one pentacoordinate, high-spin and one hexacoordinate, low-spin heme rather than two hexacoordinate low-spin cofactors. The open coordination site on the high-spin heme is inaccessible to exogenous imidazole but readily bind cyanide, suggesting that the alpha-helix containing the unbound histidine is nearby and partially shields the coordination site. The high-spin heme converts to low-spin at low-temperature, presumably via binding of the histidine residue on this nearby alpha-helix. It is suggested that the different behavior observed for the PHs protein is due to the fact that this heme is symmetric with respect to rotation about the alpha,gamma-axis of the macrocycle which bisects the meso-carbons between the vinyl groups and propionic acid residues. This symmetry precludes rotational isomerism about the alpha,gamma-axis to establish an unhindered fit. In contrast, all the other hemes examined contain at least one substituent smaller than a vinyl group which together with the fact that two different alpha,gamma-rotational isomers are possible for each heme in the dimer could allow these hemes to avoid the like-substituent--like-substituent heme--heme interactions of PHs. The propensity to avoid such interactions could explain the inequivalent binding properties of the two hemes in the dimer. For the PHs protein wherein these these interactions cannot be mitigated by rotation of the heme, other rearrangements of the protein must occur. These rearrangements could force the second-bound heme to assume a high-spin configuration.Keywords
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