TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultrafast heme-residue bond formation in six-coordinate heme proteins
T2 - Implications for functional ligand exchange
AU - Vos, Marten H.
AU - Battistoni, Andrea
AU - Lechauve, Christophe
AU - Marden, Michael C.
AU - Kiger, Laurent
AU - Desbois, Alain
AU - Pilet, Eric
AU - De Rosny, Eve
AU - Liebl, Ursula
PY - 2008/5/27
Y1 - 2008/5/27
N2 - A survey is presented of picosecond kinetics of heme - residue bond formation after photolysis of histidine, methionine, or cysteine, in a broad range of ferrous six-coordinate heme proteins. These include human neuroglobin, a bacterial heme-binding superoxide dismutase (SOD), plant cytochrome b 559, the insect nuclear receptor E75, horse heart cytochrome c and the heme domain of the bacterial sensor protein Dos. We demonstrate that the fastest and dominant phase of binding of amino acid residues to domed heme invariably takes place with a time constant in the narrow range of 5-7 ps. Remarkably, this is also the case in the heme-binding SOD, where the heme is solvent-exposed. We reason that this fast phase corresponds to barrierless formation of the heme-residue bond from a configuration close to the bound state. Only in proteins where functional ligand exchange occurs, additional slower rebinding takes place on the time scale of tens of picoseconds after residue dissociation. We propose that the presence of these slower phases reflects flexibility in the heme environment that allows external ligands (O2, CO, NO, . . .) to functionally replace the internal residue after thermal dissociation of the heme-residue bond.
AB - A survey is presented of picosecond kinetics of heme - residue bond formation after photolysis of histidine, methionine, or cysteine, in a broad range of ferrous six-coordinate heme proteins. These include human neuroglobin, a bacterial heme-binding superoxide dismutase (SOD), plant cytochrome b 559, the insect nuclear receptor E75, horse heart cytochrome c and the heme domain of the bacterial sensor protein Dos. We demonstrate that the fastest and dominant phase of binding of amino acid residues to domed heme invariably takes place with a time constant in the narrow range of 5-7 ps. Remarkably, this is also the case in the heme-binding SOD, where the heme is solvent-exposed. We reason that this fast phase corresponds to barrierless formation of the heme-residue bond from a configuration close to the bound state. Only in proteins where functional ligand exchange occurs, additional slower rebinding takes place on the time scale of tens of picoseconds after residue dissociation. We propose that the presence of these slower phases reflects flexibility in the heme environment that allows external ligands (O2, CO, NO, . . .) to functionally replace the internal residue after thermal dissociation of the heme-residue bond.
U2 - 10.1021/bi800288z
DO - 10.1021/bi800288z
M3 - Article
C2 - 18454557
AN - SCOPUS:44349088799
SN - 0006-2960
VL - 47
SP - 5718
EP - 5723
JO - Biochemistry
JF - Biochemistry
IS - 21
ER -