Cargando…
Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11
In this work, a proteolytic digest of cytochrome c (microperoxidase 11, MP-11) was used as a model to study the structural aspects of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks. The MP-11 structural heterogeneity was studied as a function of the starting pH (e.g., pH 3.1–6.1) and concentration...
Autores principales: | , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Royal Society of Chemistry
2020
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9056719/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35519052 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra04956e |
_version_ | 1784697727547867136 |
---|---|
author | Porter, J. Dit Fouque, K. Jeanne Miksovska, J. Fernandez-Lima, F. |
author_facet | Porter, J. Dit Fouque, K. Jeanne Miksovska, J. Fernandez-Lima, F. |
author_sort | Porter, J. |
collection | PubMed |
description | In this work, a proteolytic digest of cytochrome c (microperoxidase 11, MP-11) was used as a model to study the structural aspects of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks. The MP-11 structural heterogeneity was studied as a function of the starting pH (e.g., pH 3.1–6.1) and concentration (e.g., 1–50 μM) conditions and adduct coordination. Trapped ion mobility spectrometry coupled to mass spectrometry (TIMS-MS) showed the MP-11 structural dependence of the charge state distribution and molecular ion forms with the starting pH conditions. The singly charged (e.g., [M](+), [M − 2H + NH(4)](+), [M − H + Na](+) and [M − H + K](+)) and doubly charged (e.g., [M + H](2+), [M − H + NH(4)](2+), [M + Na](2+) and [M + K](2+)) molecular ion forms were observed for all solvent conditions, although the structural heterogeneity (e.g., number of mobility bands) significantly varied with the pH value and ion form. The MP-11 dimer formation as a model for heme-protein protein interactions showed that dimer formation is favored toward more neutral pH and favored when assisted by salt bridges (e.g., NH(4)(+), Na(+) and K(+)vs. H(+)). Inspection of the dimer mobility profiles (2+ and 3+ charge states) showed a high degree of structural heterogeneity as a function of the solution pH and ion form; the observation of common mobility bands suggest that the different salt bridges can stabilize similar structural motifs. In addition, the salt bridge influence on the MP-11 dimer formations was measured using collision induced dissociation and showed a strong dependence with the type of salt bridge (i.e., a CE(50) of 10.0, 11.5, 11.8 and 13.0 eV was observed for [2M + H](3+), [2M − H + NH(4)](3+), [2M + Na](3+) and [2M + K](3+), respectively). Measurements of the dimer equilibrium constant showed that the salt bridge interactions increase the binding strength of the dimeric species. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-9056719 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | The Royal Society of Chemistry |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-90567192022-05-04 Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 Porter, J. Dit Fouque, K. Jeanne Miksovska, J. Fernandez-Lima, F. RSC Adv Chemistry In this work, a proteolytic digest of cytochrome c (microperoxidase 11, MP-11) was used as a model to study the structural aspects of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks. The MP-11 structural heterogeneity was studied as a function of the starting pH (e.g., pH 3.1–6.1) and concentration (e.g., 1–50 μM) conditions and adduct coordination. Trapped ion mobility spectrometry coupled to mass spectrometry (TIMS-MS) showed the MP-11 structural dependence of the charge state distribution and molecular ion forms with the starting pH conditions. The singly charged (e.g., [M](+), [M − 2H + NH(4)](+), [M − H + Na](+) and [M − H + K](+)) and doubly charged (e.g., [M + H](2+), [M − H + NH(4)](2+), [M + Na](2+) and [M + K](2+)) molecular ion forms were observed for all solvent conditions, although the structural heterogeneity (e.g., number of mobility bands) significantly varied with the pH value and ion form. The MP-11 dimer formation as a model for heme-protein protein interactions showed that dimer formation is favored toward more neutral pH and favored when assisted by salt bridges (e.g., NH(4)(+), Na(+) and K(+)vs. H(+)). Inspection of the dimer mobility profiles (2+ and 3+ charge states) showed a high degree of structural heterogeneity as a function of the solution pH and ion form; the observation of common mobility bands suggest that the different salt bridges can stabilize similar structural motifs. In addition, the salt bridge influence on the MP-11 dimer formations was measured using collision induced dissociation and showed a strong dependence with the type of salt bridge (i.e., a CE(50) of 10.0, 11.5, 11.8 and 13.0 eV was observed for [2M + H](3+), [2M − H + NH(4)](3+), [2M + Na](3+) and [2M + K](3+), respectively). Measurements of the dimer equilibrium constant showed that the salt bridge interactions increase the binding strength of the dimeric species. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9056719/ /pubmed/35519052 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra04956e Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ |
spellingShingle | Chemistry Porter, J. Dit Fouque, K. Jeanne Miksovska, J. Fernandez-Lima, F. Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 |
title | Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 |
title_full | Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 |
title_fullStr | Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 |
title_full_unstemmed | Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 |
title_short | Salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 |
title_sort | salt bridges govern the structural heterogeneity of heme protein interactions and porphyrin networks: microperoxidase-11 |
topic | Chemistry |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9056719/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35519052 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra04956e |
work_keys_str_mv | AT porterj saltbridgesgovernthestructuralheterogeneityofhemeproteininteractionsandporphyrinnetworksmicroperoxidase11 AT ditfouquekjeanne saltbridgesgovernthestructuralheterogeneityofhemeproteininteractionsandporphyrinnetworksmicroperoxidase11 AT miksovskaj saltbridgesgovernthestructuralheterogeneityofhemeproteininteractionsandporphyrinnetworksmicroperoxidase11 AT fernandezlimaf saltbridgesgovernthestructuralheterogeneityofhemeproteininteractionsandporphyrinnetworksmicroperoxidase11 |