Separation of the photophysical aspects of the sub-picosecond (sub-ps) time-resolved resonance Raman signal from contributions due to conformation has been achieved by comparing deoxyhemoglobin (Hb) in the T state with (carbonmonoxy)hemoglobin (HbCO), deoxy-beta 4 (beta 4 CO) (All R state), and monomers deoxymyoglobin and (carbonmonoxy)myoglobin (MbCO) [beta 4 consists of a tetramer of four beta-subunits and shows no cooperativity]. In all photolyzed species, Hb*(CO), Mb*(CO), and beta 4*(CO), the iron-histidine out-of-plane mode (vFe-His), indicative of heme doming, achieves 90% of its full intensity in 1 ps. The frequency of this mode (223-228 cm-1) is shifted significantly relative to equilibrium deoxy-Hb (210-216 cm-1) in the T state, but not with respect to either equilibrium deoxy-Mb or deoxy-beta 4. A correlation between the +12 cm-1 bandshift of vFe-His and the -2 cm-1 shift of the electron density marker band (v4 at 1370 cm-1) relative to T-state deoxy-Hb is shown to hold on all time scales, including the sub-picosecond time scale. Photolyzed Hb*(CO) consists of R-state or weakly interacting tetramers on the picosecond time scale and is shown to have properties similar to those of photolyzed Mb*(CO) and beta 4*(CO) on the picosecond time scale. These results establish that heme doming occurs as an ultrafast reaction to ligand dissociation and that heme doming is the primary event in the sequence of conformational changes leading to the cooperative R-->T transition.
We describe the actions of two new allosteric effectors of hemoglobin, 2-[4-(3,5-dichlorophenylureido)phenoxy]-2-methylpropionic acid (L35) and 2-[4-(3,4,5-trichlorophenylureido)phenoxy]-2-methylpropionic acid (L345). Each of them binds to two pairs of symmetry-related sites in the central cavity of human deoxyhemoglobin. One pair of sites overlaps with that occupied by bezafibrate [Perutz et al. (1986) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 108, 1064-1078]. The other sites are new, and the pair occupied by L35 is different from that occupied by L345. All the sites are at least 20 A from the site where organic phosphates are bound. L345 is by far the most potent allosteric effector of hemoglobin ever described. At a concentration of 0.1 mM, it raises the P50 of a suspension of red cells by 50%; at 0.2 mM it raises the P50 2.5-fold. At acid pH, it reduces Hill's coefficient to near unity and prevents complete oxygen saturation even under 1 atm of pure oxygen. In azidemethemoglobin at pH 6, it induces a transition to higher spin. These properties are reminiscent of those of teleost fish hemoglobins that exhibit a Root effect. The influence of L35 and L345 and that of organic phosphates on the oxygen affinity are additive, but they compete with chloride. L35 acts more weakly than L345, but can be made to induce the same effects as L345 alone by adding inositol hexaphosphate. Both compounds increase the alkaline and acid Bohr effects. They alter the bimolecular kinetics of CO recombination after a flash by increasing the slowly reacting fraction of hemoglobin in the T state at the expense of the fast-reacting fraction in the R state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Two new potent allosteric effectors of hemoglobin, RSR-4 [2-[4-[[(3,5-dichloroanilino)carbonyl]-methyl]phenoxy]-2- methylpropionic acid] and RSR-13 [2-[4-[[(3,5-dimethlanilino)carbonyl]methyl]-phenoxy]-2-methylp rop ionic, are compared to the previously reported compounds L3,5 and L3,4,5 [Lalezari, I., Lalezari, P., Poyart, C., Marden, M., Kister, J., Bohn, B., Fermi, G., & Perutz, M. F. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 1515]. Unlike L3,5 and L3,4,5, RSR-4 and RSR-13 are less impeded by physiological concentrations of serum albumin. RSR-4 has also been shown to be more effective than L3,5 in shifting the allosteric equilibrium of bovine Hb toward the low-affinity T-state. X-ray crystal studies show that both RSR-4 and RSR-13 bind to only one pair of symmetry-related sites in the Hb central water cavity whereas previous studies on L3,5 and L3,4,5 demonstrated a second pair of symmetry-related binding sites near Arg 104 beta. Three major interactions between these allosteric effectors and Hb include the acid group with the guanidinium group of C-terminal Arg 141 alpha, the effector's amide oxygen with the ammonium ion of Lys 99 alpha, and the phi electrons of the halogenated or methylated aromatic ring and Asn 108 beta. No explanation has been found for the difference in number of binding sites observed for RSR-4 and RSR-13 (two sites) compared to L3,5 and L3,4,5 (four sites); also no correlation has been made between the number of binding sites and degree of allosteric shift in the oxygen equilibrium curve.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Flash photolysis kinetics have been measured for ligand recombination to hemoglobin (Hb) in the presence of two effectors: bezafibrate (Bzf) and inositol hexakisphosphate (IHP). The combined influence of the two independent effectors leads to predominantly T-state behavior. Samples equilibrated with 0.1 atm of CO are fully saturated, yet after photodissociation they show only T-state bimolecular recombination rates at all photolysis levels; this indicates that the allosteric transition from R to T occurs before CO rebinding and that the allosteric equilibrium favors the T-state tetramer with up to three ligands bound. Since all four ligands bind at the rate characteristic for the T-state, the return transition from T to R must occur after the fourth ligand was bound. At 1 atm of CO, rebinding to the initial R state competes with the allosteric transition resulting in a certain fraction of CO bound at the rate characteristic for the R state; this fraction is greater the smaller the percentage dissociation. Under 1 atm of oxygen, samples are not more than 93% saturated and show mainly T-state kinetics. The results show that all four hemes can bind oxygen or CO ligands in the T structure. The fraction of the kinetics occurring as geminate is less for partially liganded (T-state) samples than for fully liganded (R-state) Hb.
Heme iron out-of-plane displacement following ligand dissociation in hemoglobin, myoglobin, and the proximal cavity mutant H93G is shown to be as rapid as the heme iron out-of-plane vibrational period by sub-picosecond time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy. The results demonstrate that the effect of steric repulsion initiated by the spin change of the iron gives rise to heme doming independent of covalent attachment of the proximal ligand to the protein. It is concluded that the protein plays a passive role in the initial ultrafast heme iron motion toward the out-of-plane position observed in the deoxy structure of hemoglobin and myoglobin. The results suggest that the spin change of the heme iron is the primary cause of rapid heme doming and that steric repulsion of the proximal ligand with the heme plays a secondary role in forcing the iron out of the heme plane.
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