Significantly Enhanced Heme Retention Ability of Myoglobin Engineered to Mimic the Third Covalent Linkage by Nonaxial Histidine to Heme (Vinyl) in Synechocystis Hemoglobin

Heme proteins, which reversibly bind oxygen and display a particular fold originally identified in myoglobin (Mb), characterize the “hemoglobin (Hb) superfamily.” The long known and widely investigated Hb superfamily, however, has been enriched by the discovery and investigation of new classes and m...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2015-01, Vol.290 (4), p.1979-1993
Hauptverfasser: Uppal, Sheetal, Salhotra, Shikha, Mukhi, Nitika, Zaidi, Fatima Kamal, Seal, Manas, Dey, Somdatta Ghosh, Bhat, Rajiv, Kundu, Suman
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Heme proteins, which reversibly bind oxygen and display a particular fold originally identified in myoglobin (Mb), characterize the “hemoglobin (Hb) superfamily.” The long known and widely investigated Hb superfamily, however, has been enriched by the discovery and investigation of new classes and members. Truncated Hbs typify such novel classes and exhibit a distinct two-on-two α-helical fold. The truncated Hb from the freshwater cyanobacterium Synechocystis exhibits hexacoordinate heme chemistry and bears an unusual covalent bond between the nonaxial His117 and a heme porphyrin 2-vinyl atom, which remains tightly associated with the globin unlike any other. It seems to be the most stable Hb known to date, and His117 is the dominant force holding the heme. Mutations of amino acid residues in the vicinity did not influence this covalent linkage. Introduction of a nonaxial His into sperm whale Mb at the topologically equivalent position and in close proximity to vinyl group significantly increased the heme stability of this prototype globin. Reversed phase chromatography, electrospray ionization-MS, and MALDI-TOF analyses confirmed the presence of covalent linkage in Mb I107H. The Mb mutant with the engineered covalent linkage was stable to denaturants and exhibited ligand binding and auto-oxidation rates similar to the wild type protein. This indeed is a novel finding and provides a new perspective to the evolution of Hbs. The successful attempt at engineering heme stability holds promise for the production of stable Hb-based blood substitute.Unprecedented stability of SynHb may be engineered in other globins. Myoglobin can mimic the covalent linkage between His117 and heme vinyl in SynHb, which dictates stability as expected. I107H mutation in myoglobin significantly enhanced heme retention ability. The additional covalent linkage engineered in myoglobin provides a novel evolutionary perspective and may help in the design of stable hemoglobin-based blood substitute.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M114.603225