4 research outputs found
Frontier Residues Lining Globin Internal Cavities Present Specific Mechanical Properties
The internal cavity matrix of globins plays a key role in their biological function. Previous studies have already highlighted the plasticity of this inner network, which can fluctuate with the proteins breathing motion, and the importance of a few key residues for the regulation of ligand diffusion within the protein. In this Article, we combine all-atom molecular dynamics and coarse-grain Brownian dynamics to establish a complete mechanical landscape for six different globins chain (myoglobin, neuroglobin, cytoglobin, truncated hemoglobin, and chains α and β of hemoglobin). We show that the rigidity profiles of these proteins can fluctuate along time, and how a limited set of residues present specific mechanical properties that are related to their position at the frontier between internal cavities. Eventually, we postulate the existence of conserved positions within the globin fold, which form a mechanical nucleus located at the center of the cavity network, and whose constituent residues are essential for controlling ligand migration in globins
Relating the Diffusion of Small Ligands in Human Neuroglobin to Its Structural and Mechanical Properties
Neuroglobin (Ngb), a recently discovered member of the globin family, is overexpressed in the brain tissues over oxygen deprivation. Unlike more classical globins, such as myoglobin and hemoglobin, it is characterized by a hexacoordinated heme, and its physiological role is still unknown, despite the numerous investigations made on the protein in recent years. Another important specific feature of human Ngb is the presence of two cysteine residues (Cys46 and Cys55), which are known to form an intramolecular disulfide bridge. Since previous work on human Ngb reported that its ligand binding properties could be controlled by the coordination state of the Fe2+ atom (in the heme moiety) and the redox state of the thiol groups, we choose to develop a simulation approach combining coarse-grain Brownian dynamics and all-atom molecular dynamics and metadynamics. We have studied the diffusion of small ligands (CO, NO, and O2) in the globin internal cavity network for various states of human Ngb. Our results show how the structural and mechanical properties of the protein can be related to the ligand migration pathway, which can be extensively modified when changing the thiol’s redox state and the iron’s coordination state. We suggest that ligand binding is favored in the pentacoordinated species bearing an internal disulfide bridge
Role of Ionic Strength and pH in Modulating Thermodynamic Profiles Associated with CO Escape from Rice Nonsymbiotic Hemoglobin 1
Type 1 nonsymbiotic hemoglobins are
found in a wide variety of
land plants and exhibit very high affinities for exogenous gaseous
ligands. These proteins are presumed to have a role in protecting
plant cells from oxidative stress under etiolated/hypoxic conditions
through NO dioxygenase activity. In this study we have employed photoacoustic
calorimetry, time-resolved absorption spectroscopy, and classical
molecular dynamics simulations in order to elucidate thermodynamics,
kinetics, and ligand migration pathways upon CO photodissociation
from WT and a H73L mutant of type 1 nonsymbiotic hemoglobin from <i>Oryza sativa</i> (rice). We observe a temperature dependence
of the resolved thermodynamic parameters for CO photodissociation
from CO-rHb1 which we attribute to temperature dependent formation
of a network of electrostatic interactions in the vicinity of the
heme propionate groups. We also observe slower ligand escape from
the protein matrix under mildly acidic conditions in both the WT and
H73L mutant (τ = 134 ± 19 and 90 ± 15 ns). Visualization
of transient hydrophobic channels within our classical molecular dynamics
trajectories allows us to attribute this phenomenon to a change in
the ligand migration pathway which occurs upon protonation of the
distal His73, His117, and His152. Protonation of these residues may
be relevant to the functioning of the protein in vivo given that etiolation/hypoxia
can cause a decrease in intracellular pH in plant cells
A Novel Cryo-Reduction Method to Investigate the Molecular Mechanism of Nitric Oxide Synthases
Nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) are hemoproteins responsible
for
the biosynthesis of NO in mammals. They catalyze two successive oxidation
reactions. The mechanism of oxygen activation is based on the transfer
of two electrons and two protons. Despite structural analogies with
cytochromes P450, the molecular mechanism of NOS remains yet to be
elucidated. Because of extremely high reaction rates, conventional
kinetics methods failed to trap and characterize the major reaction
intermediates. Cryo-reduction methods offer a possibility to circumvent
this technological lock, by triggering oxygen activation at cryogenic
temperatures by using water radiolysis. However, this method is not
adapted to the NOS mechanism because of the high instability of the
initial Fe<sup>II</sup>O<sub>2</sub> complex (extremely fast autoxidation
and/or reaction with the cofactor H<sub>4</sub>B). This imposed a
protocol with a stable Fe<sup>II</sup>O<sub>2</sub> complex (observed
only for one NOS-like protein) and that excludes any redox role for
H<sub>4</sub>B. A relevant approach to the NOS mechanism would use
H<sub>4</sub>B to provide the (second) electron involved in oxygen
activation; water radiolysis would thus provide the first electron
(heme reduction). In this context, we report here an investigation
of the first electron transfer by this alternative approach, i.e.,
the reduction of native NOS by water radiolysis. We combined EPR and
resonance Raman spectroscopies to analyze NOS reduction for a combination
of different substrates, cofactor, and oxygen concentrations, and
for different NOS isoforms. Our results show that cryo-reduction of
native NOS is achieved for all conditions that are relevant to the
investigation of the NOS mechanism
