Alam S L, Satterlee J D, Mauro J M, Poulos T L, Erman J E
Department of Chemistry, Washington State University, Pullman 99164-4630, USA.
Biochemistry. 1995 Nov 28;34(47):15496-503. doi: 10.1021/bi00047a015.
The cyanide-ligated form of the baker's yeast cytochrome c peroxidase mutant bearing the mutation Asn82-->Ala82 ([N82A]CcPCN) has been studied by proton NMR spectroscopy. This mutation alters an amino acid that forms a hydrogen bond to His52, the distal histidine residue that interacts in the heme pocket with heme-bound ligands. His52 is a residue critical to cytochrome c peroxidase's normal function. Proton hyperfine resonance assignments have been made for the cyanide-ligated form of the mutant by comparison with 1-D and NOESY spectra of the wild-type native enzyme. For [N82A]CcPCN, proton NMR spectra reveal two significant phenomena. First, similar to results published for the related mutant [N82D]CcPCN [Satterlee, J. D., et al. (1994) Eur. J. Biochem. 244, 81-87], for Ala82 mutation disrupts the hydrogen bond between His52 and the heme-ligated CN. Second, four of the 24 resolved hyperfine-shifted resonances are doubled in the mutant enzyme's proton spectrum, leading to the concept that the heme active site environment is dynamically microheterogeneous on a very localized scale. Two magnetically inequivalent enzyme forms are detected in a pure enzyme preparation. Varying temperature causes the two enzyme forms to interconvert. Magnetization transfer experiments further document this interconversion between enzyme forms and have been used to determine that the rate of interconversion is 250 (+/- 53) s-1. The equilibrium constant at 20 degrees C is 1.5. Equilibrium constants have been calculated at various temperatures between 5 and 29 degrees C leading to the following values: delta H = 60 kJ mol-1; delta S = 0.20 kJ K-1 mol-1.