High‐pressure 1 H NMR study of pressure‐induced structural changes in the heme environments of metcyanomyoglobins

Abstract The effect of pressure on the heme environment structure of sperm whale and horse heart metcyanomyoglobins was investigated up to 300 MPa by high‐pressure 1 H NMR spectroscopy. Pressure‐induced changes in the distances between the observed protons and the heme iron atom were estimated from...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Protein Science
Main Authors: Kitahara, Ryo, Kato, Minoru, Taniguchi, Yoshihiro
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1110/ps.4620103
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1110/ps.4620103
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Summary:Abstract The effect of pressure on the heme environment structure of sperm whale and horse heart metcyanomyoglobins was investigated up to 300 MPa by high‐pressure 1 H NMR spectroscopy. Pressure‐induced changes in the distances between the observed protons and the heme iron atom were estimated from changes in the dipolar shift due to the paramagnetic effect on the protons. The changes showed that the heme peripheral structure as a whole was compressed by pressure; the movements of the protons in the heme peripheral residues were in the range of +0.16 to −0.54 Å/300 MPa. One‐dimensional compressibilities for the protons, excluding the protons of the distal His residue, were in the range of 1.0 × 10 −4 to 6.1 × 10 −4 /MPa. The movements of the protons induced by pressure correlated well with the distance between the protons and cavities in the protein. The distal His residue (His 64) moved toward the outside of the heme pocket, but remained in the pocket even at 300 MPa. This movement was driven dominantly by a change in the dihedral angle around the C α –C β rotational bond of the residue. Comparative work on horse heart metcyanomyoglobin implied that the conformational change of the His 64 imidazole ring was larger in the horse heart metcyanomyoglobin than in the sperm whale metcyanomyoglobin.