“…Contrary to previous indications,26 recent work27 has shown that in native-heme Mb (yellowfin tuna) the precise value of the heme orientational equilibrium constant is dependent to unequivocally that the dominant heme orientations are the same as those of their other derivatives, including the aquamet proteins precursory to the iron(III) nitrosyls. 15 In order to account for the different band shapes among the above derivatives, the rate of any ligand-dependent heme reorientation would need to be fast relative to the time required to prepare an adduct and obtain its optical spectrum. This seems unlikely: when horse heart myoglobin is reconstituted15,28 from apoprotein by using Fe(CO)-(PPIX) at pH 7 (µ = 0.2 phosphate, 1 atm CO, 20 °C), the subsequent equilibrative reordering of the heme from its initially randomized orientational distribution may be followed by circular dichroism spectroscopy and is observed to occur with a first-order rate constant of only (3.9 ± 0.2) X 10~7 s"1.…”