Published 2011
| Version v1
Publication
Ligand migration in the apolar tunnel of Cerebratulus lacteus mini-hemoglobin.
Description
The large apolar tunnel traversing the mini-hemoglobin from Cerebratulus lacteus (CerHb) has been examined by X-ray
crystallography, ligand binding kinetics, and molecular dynamic simulations. The addition of 10 atm of xenon causes
loss of diffraction in wild-type (wt) CerHbO2 crystals, but Leu-86(G12)Ala CerHbO2, which has an increased tunnel volume,
stably accommodates two discrete xenon atoms: one adjacent to Leu-86(G12) and another near Ala-55(E18). Molecular dynamicssimulations of ligand migration in wt CerHb show a
low energy pathway through the apolar tunnel when Leu or
Ala, but not Phe or Trp, is present at the 86(G12) position. The addition of 10–15 atm of xenon to solutions of wt CerHbCO
and L86A CerHbCO causes 2–3-fold increases in the fraction of geminate ligand recombination, indicating that the bound xenon blocks CO escape. This idea was confirmed by L86F and
L86W mutations, which cause even larger increases in the fraction of geminate CO rebinding, 2–5-fold decreases in the
bimolecular rate constants for ligand entry, and large increases in the computed energy barriers for ligand movement through
the apolar tunnel. Both the addition of xenon to the L86A mutant
and oxidation of wt CerHb heme iron cause the appearance of an out Gln-44(E7) conformer, in which the amide side
chain points out toward the solvent and appears to lower the barrier for ligand escape through the E7 gate. However, the
observed kinetics suggest little entry and escape (<25%) through the E7 pathway, presumably because the in Gln-
44(E7) conformer is thermodynamically favored.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/297978
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/297978
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE