2 research outputs found
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 Time-Resolved Iron-Specific X-ray Absorption Experiment Yields No Evidence for an Fe<sup>2+</sup> → Fe<sup>3+</sup> Transition during Q<sub>A</sub><sup>-</sup> → Q<sub>B</sub> Electron Transfer in the Photosynthetic Reaction Center<sup>†</sup>
Previous time-resolved FTIR measurements suggested the involvement of an intermediary
component in the electron transfer step QA- → QB in the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from
Rhodobacter sphaeroides [Remy and Gerwert (2003) Nat. Struct. Biol. 10, 637]. By a kinetic X-ray
absorption experiment at the Fe K-edge we investigated whether oxidation occurs at the ferric non-heme
iron located between the two quinones. In isolated reaction centers with a high content of functional QB,
at a time resolution of 30 μs and at room temperature, no evidence for transient oxidation of Fe was
obtained. However, small X-ray transients occurred, in a similar micro- to millisecond time range as in
the IR experiments, which may point to changes in the Fe ligand environment due to the charges on QA-
and QB-. In addition, VIS measurements agree with the IR data and do not exclude an intermediate in the
QA- → QB transition
