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Towards understanding non-equivalence of α and β subunits within human hemoglobin in conformational relaxation and molecular oxygen rebinding

Picosecond to millisecond laser time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy was used to study molecular oxygen (O(2)) rebinding and conformational relaxation following O(2) photodissociation in the α and β subunits within human hemoglobin in the quaternary R-like structure. Oxy-cyanomet valency...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lepeshkevich, Sergei V., Sazanovich, Igor V., Parkhats, Marina V., Gilevich, Syargey N., Dzhagarov, Boris M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8153241/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34123331
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc00712b
Descripción
Sumario:Picosecond to millisecond laser time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy was used to study molecular oxygen (O(2)) rebinding and conformational relaxation following O(2) photodissociation in the α and β subunits within human hemoglobin in the quaternary R-like structure. Oxy-cyanomet valency hybrids, α(2)(Fe(2+)–O(2))β(2)(Fe(3+)–CN) and α(2)(Fe(3+)–CN)β(2)(Fe(2+)–O(2)), were used as models for oxygenated R-state hemoglobin. An extended kinetic model for geminate O(2) rebinding in the ferrous hemoglobin subunits, ligand migration between the primary and secondary docking site(s), and nonexponential tertiary relaxation within the R quaternary structure, was introduced and discussed. Significant functional non-equivalence of the α and β subunits in both the geminate O(2) rebinding and concomitant structural relaxation was revealed. For the β subunits, the rate constant for the geminate O(2) rebinding to the unrelaxed tertiary structure and the tertiary transition rate were found to be greater than the corresponding values for the α subunits. The conformational relaxation following the O(2) photodissociation in the α and β subunits was found to decrease the rate constant for the geminate O(2) rebinding, this effect being more than one order of magnitude greater for the β subunits than for the α subunits. Evidence was provided for the modulation of the O(2) rebinding to the individual α and β subunits within human hemoglobin in the R-state structure by the intrinsic heme reactivity through a change in proximal constraints upon the relaxation of the tertiary structure on a picosecond to microsecond time scale. Our results demonstrate that, for native R-state oxyhemoglobin, O(2) rebinding properties and spectral changes following the O(2) photodissociation can be adequately described as the sum of those for the α and β subunits within the valency hybrids. The isolated β chains (hemoglobin H) show similar behavior to the β subunits within the valency hybrids and can be used as a model for the β subunits within the R-state oxyhemoglobin. At the same time, the isolated α chains behave differently to the α subunits within the valency hybrids.