REVIEW: Fluorescence Study of Conformational Transitions in the
Structure of Myoglobin
G. B. Postnikova
Redox-Protein Biophysics Group, Institute of Cell Biophysics, Russian
Academy of Sciences, Pushchino, Moscow Region, 142292 Russia; fax:
(0967) 79-0509; E-mail:
komarov_y@venus.iteb.serpukhov.su
Received May 28, 1998; Revision received October 18, 1998
Fluorescence studies of myoglobin and Mb-like structures, apomyoglobin
and the complex of apo-Mb with protoporphyrin IX, reveal both the
similarity between them, which is due to a common type of polypeptide
chain folding, and the distinctions imposed by the influence of the
prosthetic group. Close resemblance of structures of holomyoglobin and
its metal-free analog, PPIX--apo-Mb, points to a key role of specific
interactions between the protein and the protoporphyrin macrocycle
rather than the Fe-protein bond in the formation of Mb-like structures.
In PPIX--apo-Mb, both the hydrophobic core and the important ionic
bonds between different structural elements («salt
bridges») stabilizing the Mb structure are almost completely
retained. The bond between Fe and proximal His-F8 allows additional
integration of the structures of the heme cavity and the myoglobin
molecule as a whole, providing its functional activity and highly
cooperative conformational transitions. In all the myoglobin-like
structures studied, a certain relationship is found between
conformational states of the «active center», the heme
cavity, and the N-terminal part of the molecule. This is probably due
to variations in the mutual orientation of the ABCDE and FGH helical
domains, depending on the interactions between the protein, the
prosthetic group, and the ligand in the heme crevice. The correlation
between conformations of the N-terminal and heme regions found at a
level of the globin tertiary structure is very important for
understanding the mechanisms of homo- and heterotropic regulation in
tetrameric hemoglobins.
KEY WORDS: myoglobin, fluorescence, conformational changes