Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins

The design of recombinant globins as oxygen storage and delivery pharmaceuticals must address two key protein engineering problems, one dealing with the improvement of apoprotein stability and the other with the structural determinants of ligand binding rates. Thirteen naturally occurring apomyoglob...

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Main Author: Scott, Emily Elizabeth
Other Authors: Olson, John S.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19309
id ftriceuniv:oai:scholarship.rice.edu:1911/19309
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spelling ftriceuniv:oai:scholarship.rice.edu:1911/19309 2023-05-15T18:26:42+02:00 Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins Scott, Emily Elizabeth Olson, John S. 1998 179 p. application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19309 eng eng Scott, Emily Elizabeth. "Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins." (1998) Diss., Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19309 . https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19309 THESIS BIOCHEM. 1998 SCOTT Molecular biology Biochemistry Thesis Text 1998 ftriceuniv 2022-08-09T20:30:31Z The design of recombinant globins as oxygen storage and delivery pharmaceuticals must address two key protein engineering problems, one dealing with the improvement of apoprotein stability and the other with the structural determinants of ligand binding rates. Thirteen naturally occurring apomyoglobins were observed to unfold following the same two transitions as sperm whale apomyoglobin but with variable stabilities. Even with highly similar proteins, it is difficult to identify the individual amino acids and the specific intramolecular noncovalent forces that confer protein stability. Site-directed mutagenesis of apomyoglobins suggests that single point mutations have complex, but generally small effects on the unfolding of apomyoglobin. However, two pig multiple mutants were constructed on the basis of substitution trends in stable mammalian myoglobins, and these genetically engineered proteins had markedly increased overall stabilities. This result suggests that analysis of naturally occurring variants may be the best way to select modifications that inhibit denaturation. Oxygen binding was measured by both conventional and ultrafast laser photolysis techniques for more than 70 myoglobin mutants at 25 different positions. Intramolecular geminate rebinding of oxygen to sperm whale myoglobin occurs on a nanosecond timescale at room temperature and shows two well separated kinetic components, indicating at least two internal sites from which the photodissociated ligands return to the iron. Xenon accelerates the fast reaction but decelerates and diminishes the slower reaction. The rates and proportions of the two components and xenon effects on them vary widely for different mutants and suggest photodissociated ligands occupy xenon site 4 in the distal pocket and xenon site 1 below the plane of the heme. Rebinding from these positions corresponds to the slower geminate phase for oxygen rebinding. Computed bimolecular rate constants for ligand entry suggest that only residues immediately adjacent to the bound ... Thesis Sperm whale Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive
institution Open Polar
collection Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive
op_collection_id ftriceuniv
language English
topic Molecular biology
Biochemistry
spellingShingle Molecular biology
Biochemistry
Scott, Emily Elizabeth
Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins
topic_facet Molecular biology
Biochemistry
description The design of recombinant globins as oxygen storage and delivery pharmaceuticals must address two key protein engineering problems, one dealing with the improvement of apoprotein stability and the other with the structural determinants of ligand binding rates. Thirteen naturally occurring apomyoglobins were observed to unfold following the same two transitions as sperm whale apomyoglobin but with variable stabilities. Even with highly similar proteins, it is difficult to identify the individual amino acids and the specific intramolecular noncovalent forces that confer protein stability. Site-directed mutagenesis of apomyoglobins suggests that single point mutations have complex, but generally small effects on the unfolding of apomyoglobin. However, two pig multiple mutants were constructed on the basis of substitution trends in stable mammalian myoglobins, and these genetically engineered proteins had markedly increased overall stabilities. This result suggests that analysis of naturally occurring variants may be the best way to select modifications that inhibit denaturation. Oxygen binding was measured by both conventional and ultrafast laser photolysis techniques for more than 70 myoglobin mutants at 25 different positions. Intramolecular geminate rebinding of oxygen to sperm whale myoglobin occurs on a nanosecond timescale at room temperature and shows two well separated kinetic components, indicating at least two internal sites from which the photodissociated ligands return to the iron. Xenon accelerates the fast reaction but decelerates and diminishes the slower reaction. The rates and proportions of the two components and xenon effects on them vary widely for different mutants and suggest photodissociated ligands occupy xenon site 4 in the distal pocket and xenon site 1 below the plane of the heme. Rebinding from these positions corresponds to the slower geminate phase for oxygen rebinding. Computed bimolecular rate constants for ligand entry suggest that only residues immediately adjacent to the bound ...
author2 Olson, John S.
format Thesis
author Scott, Emily Elizabeth
author_facet Scott, Emily Elizabeth
author_sort Scott, Emily Elizabeth
title Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins
title_short Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins
title_full Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins
title_fullStr Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins
title_full_unstemmed Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins
title_sort apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins
publishDate 1998
url https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19309
genre Sperm whale
genre_facet Sperm whale
op_relation Scott, Emily Elizabeth. "Apoglobin stability and ligand movements in mammalian myoglobins." (1998) Diss., Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19309 .
https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19309
THESIS BIOCHEM. 1998 SCOTT
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