Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1832526 (PCC)
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To investigate the molecular basis for the 100-fold slower rate of CO dissociation in ferrous peroxidases relative to myoglobin, CO dissociation rates were measured as a function of pH in the cloned cytochrome c peroxidase from yeast [CCP(MI)] and in several mutants in the heme binding pocket prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutants included Asp 235----Asn; Arg 48----Lys, Leu; and His 181----Gly. Changes in the absorption spectrum with pH are consistent with conversion of the CO-ferrous CCP(MI) complex from acidic to alkaline forms by a two-proton cooperative ionization, with an apparent pKa = 7.6, analogous to that described for CCP from bakers' yeast [Iizuka, T., Makino, R., Ishimura, Y., & Yonetani, T. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 1407-1412]. The rate of CO dissociation (koff) was increased 11-fold (from 0.7 x 10(-4) to 8.0 x 10(-4) s-1) by conversion of the acidic to the alkaline form. Analogous acidic and alkaline forms of the CO complex were also observed in the mutants of CCP(MI) examined here. In the acidic form, koff was increased 5- and 20-fold when Arg 48 was replaced with Lys and Leu, respectively, while in the acidic form of mutants that possess Arg 48, koff was similar to that observed in CCP(MI). Conversion of the CO complex from the acidic to alkaline form increased koff in all the mutants, and the pH-dependent increase in koff correlated with a two-proton cooperative ionization, except in the case of His 181----Gly. In this mutant, pH-dependent increase in koff correlated with a single-proton ionization, implicating His 181 as one of the two residues that is deprotonated in the conversion of CO-ferrous CCP(MI) from acidic to alkaline forms. Only a 2.5-fold variation was observed for koff between the alkaline form of CCP(MI) and the Arg 48----Leu mutant, suggesting that the influence of Arg 48 on the rate of CO dissociation is decreased in the alkaline form by a conformational change.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:CO dissociation in cytochrome c peroxidase: site-directed mutagenesis shows that distal Arg 48 influences CO dissociation rates. 217 59

The product of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 gene slr2097 is a 123 amino acid polypeptide chain belonging to the truncated hemoglobin family. Recombinant, ferric heme-reconstituted Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 hemoglobin is a low-spin complex whose endogenous hexacoordination gives rise to optical and NMR characteristics reminiscent of cytochrome b(5) [Scott, N. L., and Lecomte, J. T. J. (2000) Protein Sci. 9, 587-597]. In this work, the sequential assignments using (15)N-(13)C-labeled protein, (1)H nuclear Overhauser effects, and longitudinal relaxation data identified His70 as the proximal histidine and His46 as the sixth ligand to the iron ion. It was also found that one of two possible heme orientations within the protein matrix is highly preferred (>90%) and that this orientation is the same as in vertebrate myoglobins. The rate constant for the 180 degrees rotation of the heme within a protein cage to produce the favored isomer was 0.5 h(-1) at 25 degrees C, approximately 35 times faster than in sperm whale myoglobin. Variable temperature studies revealed an activation energy of 132 +/- 4 kJ mol(-1), similar to the value in metaquomyoglobin at the same pH. The rate constant for heme loss from the major isomer was estimated to be 0.01 h(-1) by optical spectroscopy, close to the value for myoglobin and decades slower than in the related Nostoc commune cyanoglobin. The slow heme loss was attributed in part to the additional coordination bond to His46, whereas the relatively fast rate of heme reorientation suggested that this bond was weaker than the proximal His70-Fe bond. The standard reduction potential of the hexacoordinated protein was measured with and without poly-L-lysine as a mediator and found to be approximately -150 mV vs SHE, indicating a stabilization of the ferric state compared to most hemoglobins and b(5) cytochromes.
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PMID:Binding of ferric heme by the recombinant globin from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. 1137 Dec 18

Hemoglobins (phytoglobins) from rice plants (nsHb1) and from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis (PCC 6803) (SynHb) can reduce hydroxylamine with two electrons to form ammonium. The reaction requires intermolecular electron transfer between protein molecules, and rapid electron self-exchange might play a role in distinguishing these hemoglobins from others with slower reaction rates, such as myoglobin. A relatively rapid electron self-exchange rate constant has been measured for SynHb by NMR, but the rate constant for myoglobin is equivocal and a value for nsHb1 has not yet been measured. Here we report electron self-exchange rate constants for nsHb1 and Mb as a test of their role in hydroxylamine reduction. These proteins are not suitable for analysis by NMR ZZ exchange, so a method was developed that uses cross-reactions between each hemoglobin and its deutero-hemin substituted counterpart. The resulting electron transfer is between identical proteins with low driving forces and thus closely approximates true electron self-exchange. The reactions can be monitored spectrally due to the distinct spectra of the prosthetic groups, and from this electron self-exchange rate constants of 880 (SynHb), 2900 (nsHb1), and 0.05M(-1) s(-1) (Mb) have been measured for each hemoglobin. Calculations of cross-reactions using these values accurately predict hydroxylamine reduction rates for each protein, suggesting that electron self-exchange plays an important role in the reaction.
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PMID:Electron self-exchange in hemoglobins revealed by deutero-hemin substitution. 2614 77