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  4. A TyrCD1/TrpG8 hydrogen bond network and a TyrB10TyrCD1 covalent link shape the heme distal site of Mycobacterium tuberculosis hemoglobin O.
 
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A TyrCD1/TrpG8 hydrogen bond network and a TyrB10TyrCD1 covalent link shape the heme distal site of Mycobacterium tuberculosis hemoglobin O.

Author(s)
Milani, Mario
Savard, Pierre-Yves
Ouellet, Hugues
ASI Sponsor
Subjects

Amino Acid Sequence

Bacterial Proteins

Crystallography

Heme

Heme: chemistry

Hemoglobins

Hemoglobins: chemistr...

Hydrogen Bonding

Models

Molecular

Protein Conformation

Protein Structure

Secondary

Truncated Hemoglobins...

Tyrosine

X-Ray

Date Issued
2003-05-01
Publisher
PNAS
Abstract
Truncated hemoglobins (Hbs) are small hemoproteins, identified in microorganisms and in some plants, forming a separate cluster within the Hb superfamily. Two distantly related truncated Hbs, trHbN and trHbO, are expressed at different developmental stages in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Sequence analysis shows that the two proteins share 18% amino acid identities and belong to different groups within the truncated Hb cluster. Although a specific defense role against nitrosative stress has been ascribed to trHbN (expressed during the Mycobacterium stationary phase), no clear functions have been recognized for trHbO, which is expressed throughout the Mycobacterium growth phase. The 2.1-A crystal structure of M. tuberculosis cyano-met trHbO shows that the protein assembles in a compact dodecamer. Six of the dodecamer subunits are characterized by a double conformation for their CD regions and, most notably, by a covalent bond linking the phenolic O atom of TyrB10 to the aromatic ring of TyrCD1, in the heme distal cavity. All 12 subunits display a cyanide ion bound to the heme Fe atom, stabilized by a tight hydrogen-bonded network based on the (globin very rare) TyrCD1 and TrpG8 residues. The small apolar AlaE7 residue leaves room for ligand access to the heme distal site through the conventional E7 path, as proposed for myoglobin. Different from trHbN, where a 20-A protein matrix tunnel is held to sustain ligand diffusion to an otherwise inaccessible heme distal site, the topologically related region in trHbO hosts two protein matrix cavities.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/1407
ISSN
0027-8424
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1037676100
URL
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/100/10/5766
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