Protein Conformational Relaxation and Ligand Migration in Myoglobin:  A Nanosecond to Millisecond Molecular Movie from Time-Resolved Laue X-ray Diffraction

A time-resolved Laue X-ray diffraction technique has been used to explore protein relaxation and ligand migration at room temperature following photolysis of a single crystal of carbon monoxymyoglobin. The CO ligand is photodissociated by a 7.5 ns laser pulse, and the subsequent structural changes a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemistry (Easton) 2001-11, Vol.40 (46), p.13802-13815
Hauptverfasser: Šrajer, Vukica, Ren, Zhong, Teng, Tsu-Yi, Schmidt, Marius, Ursby, Thomas, Bourgeois, Dominique, Pradervand, Claude, Schildkamp, Wilfried, Wulff, Michael, Moffat, Keith
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A time-resolved Laue X-ray diffraction technique has been used to explore protein relaxation and ligand migration at room temperature following photolysis of a single crystal of carbon monoxymyoglobin. The CO ligand is photodissociated by a 7.5 ns laser pulse, and the subsequent structural changes are probed by 150 ps or 1 μs X-ray pulses at 14 laser/X-ray delay times, ranging from 1 ns to 1.9 ms. Very fast heme and protein relaxation involving the E and F helices is evident from the data at a 1 ns time delay. The photodissociated CO molecules are detected at two locations:  at a distal pocket docking site and at the Xe 1 binding site in the proximal pocket. The population by CO of the primary, distal site peaks at a 1 ns time delay and decays to half the peak value in 70 ns. The secondary, proximal docking site reaches its highest occupancy of 20% at ∼100 ns and has a half-life of ∼10 μs. At ∼100 ns, all CO molecules are accounted for within the protein:  in one of these two docking sites or bound to the heme. Thereafter, the CO molecules migrate to the solvent from which they rebind to deoxymyoglobin in a bimolecular process with a second-order rate coefficient of 4.5 × 105 M-1 s-1. Our results also demonstrate that structural changes as small as 0.2 Å and populations of CO docking sites of 10% can be detected by time-resolved X-ray diffraction.
ISSN:0006-2960
1520-4995
DOI:10.1021/bi010715u