The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin

Extended illumination slows the rate of CO rebinding to myoglobin below 160K where CO is trapped within the protein after photolysis. The process increasing the rebinding barriers is found to be a photon-induced rather than a thermal effect. Rebinding barriers of molecules that are photolyzed do not...

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Main Author: Mourant, Judith Renee
Other Authors: Frauenfelder, Hans
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/29594
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spelling ftunivillidea:oai:www.ideals.illinois.edu:2142/29594 2023-05-15T18:26:51+02:00 The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin Mourant, Judith Renee Frauenfelder, Hans 1992 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/29594 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/2142/29594 3478205 © 1992 Judith Renee Mourant myoglobin rebinding of carbon monoxide to myoglobin rebinding barriers text 1992 ftunivillidea 2016-03-19T23:29:41Z Extended illumination slows the rate of CO rebinding to myoglobin below 160K where CO is trapped within the protein after photolysis. The process increasing the rebinding barriers is found to be a photon-induced rather than a thermal effect. Rebinding barriers of molecules that are photolyzed do not increase unless light is incident on the sample. The effects of extended illumination in each of the three A substates of sperm whale myoglobin are studied in considerable detail and compared with the effects seen in horse myoglobin. The changes in the distribution of barriers for CO rebinding are different for the individual substates. The temperature at which the sample is illuminated is also a crucial factor determining the resulting rates for CO rebinding; higher barriers are created at higher temperatures. The effects of extended illumination on the A1 substate can be divided into three regimes. In regime I, an increase of the enthalpy barrier for rebinding by 1-2kJ/mol is observed which may be explained by a change in the azimuthal angle of the proximal histidine with respect to the heme plane. In regime II, the enthalpy barriers are increased by about 3-lOkJ/mol. Changes in spectral bands monitoring the protein conformation in this regime are similar to those in regime I. There is evidence for changes on the distal as well as the proximal side of the heme in the regime m. The increase in the enthalpy rebinding barrier is 11-22kJ/mol. The effects of illumination are compared with the conformational relaxation of MbCO that slows down rebinding at temperatures above 160K. There are some features in common with this relaxation, but also significant differences. Finally, a mechanism for the temperature dependence of the effects is suggested. Text Sperm whale University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship)
op_collection_id ftunivillidea
language unknown
topic myoglobin
rebinding of carbon monoxide to myoglobin
rebinding barriers
spellingShingle myoglobin
rebinding of carbon monoxide to myoglobin
rebinding barriers
Mourant, Judith Renee
The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin
topic_facet myoglobin
rebinding of carbon monoxide to myoglobin
rebinding barriers
description Extended illumination slows the rate of CO rebinding to myoglobin below 160K where CO is trapped within the protein after photolysis. The process increasing the rebinding barriers is found to be a photon-induced rather than a thermal effect. Rebinding barriers of molecules that are photolyzed do not increase unless light is incident on the sample. The effects of extended illumination in each of the three A substates of sperm whale myoglobin are studied in considerable detail and compared with the effects seen in horse myoglobin. The changes in the distribution of barriers for CO rebinding are different for the individual substates. The temperature at which the sample is illuminated is also a crucial factor determining the resulting rates for CO rebinding; higher barriers are created at higher temperatures. The effects of extended illumination on the A1 substate can be divided into three regimes. In regime I, an increase of the enthalpy barrier for rebinding by 1-2kJ/mol is observed which may be explained by a change in the azimuthal angle of the proximal histidine with respect to the heme plane. In regime II, the enthalpy barriers are increased by about 3-lOkJ/mol. Changes in spectral bands monitoring the protein conformation in this regime are similar to those in regime I. There is evidence for changes on the distal as well as the proximal side of the heme in the regime m. The increase in the enthalpy rebinding barrier is 11-22kJ/mol. The effects of illumination are compared with the conformational relaxation of MbCO that slows down rebinding at temperatures above 160K. There are some features in common with this relaxation, but also significant differences. Finally, a mechanism for the temperature dependence of the effects is suggested.
author2 Frauenfelder, Hans
format Text
author Mourant, Judith Renee
author_facet Mourant, Judith Renee
author_sort Mourant, Judith Renee
title The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin
title_short The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin
title_full The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin
title_fullStr The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin
title_full_unstemmed The effects of extended illumination on CO rebinding to myoglobin
title_sort effects of extended illumination on co rebinding to myoglobin
publishDate 1992
url http://hdl.handle.net/2142/29594
genre Sperm whale
genre_facet Sperm whale
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2142/29594
3478205
op_rights © 1992 Judith Renee Mourant
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