Structural Basis for Ligand Discrimination and Response Initiation in the Heme-Based Oxygen Sensor FixL
FixL is a multiple-domain bacterial O2-sensing protein that modulates the activity of its kinase domain in response to O2 concentration. The kinase activity is coupled, via phosphoryl transfer, to transcriptional activation by a response-regulating protein, FixJ. Heme ligation resulting in a transit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biochemistry (Easton) 1996-07, Vol.35 (29), p.9539-9548 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | FixL is a multiple-domain bacterial O2-sensing protein that modulates the activity of its kinase domain in response to O2 concentration. The kinase activity is coupled, via phosphoryl transfer, to transcriptional activation by a response-regulating protein, FixJ. Heme ligation resulting in a transition from high to low spin inhibits the kinase through an, as yet, ill-defined mechanism. This report presents spectroscopic, kinetic, and thermodynamic data on various complexes of two deletion derivatives of Rhizobium meliloti FixL, FixLN (the heme domain) and a functional heme kinase, FixL*. Resonance Raman characterization of metFixLN and metFixL* indicates that the heme core is smaller than that observed in metmyoglobin and is indicative of a five-coordinate high-spin heme in metFixLs. Resonance Raman spectra of FixL−CO adducts reveal that the Fe−CO unit and/or its electrostatic environment in FixL*−CO is distorted relative to that in FixLN−CO. The 1H NMR spectra of the met forms further support the model of an asymmetric perturbation of the heme pocket structure associated with the presence of the kinase domain in FixL*. Observation of equivalent Fe−imidazole stretching vibrations for deoxyFixLN and deoxyFixL* (212 cm-1) indicates that the source of this perturbation in the heme pocket of FixL* does not lie on the proximal side of the heme. The equivalent Fe−imidazole stretching frequencies for deoxyFixLN and FixL* indicate that the presence of the kinase domain does not alter the relative strength of the proximal Fe−imidazole bond and that the proximal imidazole ligand is weakly H-bonded, probably to a backbone carbonyl group. Kinetic and thermodynamic data for the reactions of cyanide and fluoride ions with FixL are consistent with shape selectivity due to steric and/or an anisotropic electrostatic field in the distal heme pocket being responsible for the unique reactivities (or lack thereof) of FixL with ligands, i.e., O2, CO, CN-, F-, N3 -, and SCN-. While the rate constants for binding of CN- to metFixLN and metFixL* are an order of magnitude slower than that for metMb, the stabilities of these complexes and metMb−CN are nearly the same. Neither N3 - nor SCN- binds to the heme with measurable affinity. Since other ferric heme proteins form stable adducts with these ligands, the inability of FixL to form analogous complexes suggests that the ligand selectivity of this protein is rooted in insurmountable activation barriers to the binding of ligands con |
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ISSN: | 0006-2960 1520-4995 |
DOI: | 10.1021/bi9530853 |