Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1318136 | Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2007 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
We report a protein conformational change following carbon monoxide photodetachment from fully reduced bovine cytochrome c oxidase that is hypothesized to be associated with changes in ligand mobility through a dioxygen access channel in the protein. Although not resolved by earlier photoacoustic or optical studies on this adduct, utilization of slightly lower temperatures revealed a process with a kinetic lifetime of about 70 ns at 10 °C. We measure an enthalpy change of about 8 kcal/mol in 0.050 M HEPES buffer that becomes less endothermic (ÎH â¼Â 2 kcal/mol) at higher ionic strength. The volume contraction of about â0.7 mL/mol associated with the process almost doubles in higher ionic strength buffer systems. Measurements of samples in phosphate buffer systems are similar and appear to display the same subtle ionic strength dependence. Both the isolation of this photoacoustic signal component and the possible dependence on ionic strength of the thermodynamic parameters derived from its analysis appear analogous to and consistent with prior photoacoustic results monitoring CO photodetachment from the camphor complex of cytochrome P-450. Accordingly, we consider a similar model in which a conformational change results in movement of an exposed charged group or groups towards the interior of the protein, out of contact with solvent, as in the closing of a salt bridge.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Inorganic Chemistry
Authors
W. Anthony Oertling, Charisa D. Cornellison, Nathan R. Treff, Junji Watanabe, Michelle A. Pressler, Jeanne R. Small,