All allosteric proteins are design as oligomeric assemblies of subunits (or discrete domains) with spatially distinct ligand binding sites. A comprehensive set of structural and functional data on the individual ligation states of an allosteric protein is a prerequisite to developing an accurate stereochemical model that fully describes its mechanism of action. In the case of hemoglobin, Ackers and co-workers have taken at large step toward this ambitious goal by determining for the first time a complete set of thermodynamic relationships between all of hemoglobin's ten ligation states. These data have revealed a """"""""molecular code mechanism"""""""" which states that binding of the first ligand to hemoglobin (a tetramer composed of two alphabeta dimers) increases the ligand affinity of the adjacent unliganded subunit on the liganded alphabeta dimer, but it does not increase (or increases to much smaller degree depending on the type of ligand) the affinity of the two unliganded subunits on the opposite alphabeta dimer. For this to be true, a dimer's alpha and beta subunits must be linked to a common region of quaternary constraint. We have formulated an initial stereochemical model that identifies such a region, and in collaboration with the other members of this Program Project, are now in a position to test the model's validity and, hopefully, refine the model. The model describes how specific residues propagate ligation-induced changes in heme structure to subunit interfaces and thereby disrupt the """"""""hinge"""""""" region of an alphabeta-alphabeta interface. Specifically, the ligand- induced transition (between the deoxy, or T quaternary structure, and other T-like structures) includes large tertiary structure changes to the alpha F helix and COOH terminus, a 2 degrees bending of each alphabeta dimer, and a approximately 5.5 degrees rotation of one alphabeta dimer relative to the other alphabeta dimer. We will test and extend the proposed stereochemical model by 1) determining the structures of specific site-directed mutant hemoglobins that are predicted to alter the ligand-induced tertiary structure changes to the alpha F helix and a COOH terminus, 2) carrying out a mutational screen to uncover the stereochemical mechanism of ligand- induced alphabeta dimer bending, and 3) determine the energetically accessible structures of hemoglobin's intermediate ligation species with a strategy that we have successfully used to determine the wide range for quaternary structures of fully liganded hemoglobin. This research should result in new insights into hemoglobin's molecular mechanism that may provide for better understanding and treatment of hemoglobinopathies and for the design of improved blood substrates.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01GM058890-03
Application #
6410449
Study Section
Project Start
2001-01-01
Project End
2001-12-31
Budget Start
1998-10-01
Budget End
1999-09-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$176,978
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Iowa
Department
Type
DUNS #
041294109
City
Iowa City
State
IA
Country
United States
Zip Code
52242
Kwiatkowski, Laura D; Hui, Hilda L; Karasik, Ellen et al. (2007) Mutations of the betaN102 residue of HbA not only inhibit the ligand-linked T to Re state transition, but also profoundly affect the properties of the T state itself. Biochemistry 46:2037-49
Das, Tapan K; Dewilde, Sylvia; Friedman, Joel M et al. (2006) Multiple active site conformers in the carbon monoxide complexes of trematode hemoglobins. J Biol Chem 281:11471-9
Samuni, Uri; Roche, Camille J; Dantsker, David et al. (2006) Modulation of reactivity and conformation within the T-quaternary state of human hemoglobin: the combined use of mutagenesis and sol-gel encapsulation. Biochemistry 45:2820-35
Dantsker, David; Roche, Camille; Samuni, Uri et al. (2005) The position 68(E11) side chain in myoglobin regulates ligand capture, bond formation with heme iron, and internal movement into the xenon cavities. J Biol Chem 280:38740-55
Kavanaugh, Jeffrey S; Rogers, Paul H; Arnone, Arthur et al. (2005) Intersubunit interactions associated with Tyr42 alpha stabilize the quaternary-T tetramer but are not major quaternary constraints in deoxyhemoglobin. Biochemistry 44:3806-20
Kavanaugh, Jeffrey S; Rogers, Paul H; Arnone, Arthur (2005) Crystallographic evidence for a new ensemble of ligand-induced allosteric transitions in hemoglobin: the T-to-T(high) quaternary transitions. Biochemistry 44:6101-21
Viappiani, Cristiano; Bettati, Stefano; Bruno, Stefano et al. (2004) New insights into allosteric mechanisms from trapping unstable protein conformations in silica gels. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101:14414-9
Samuni, Uri; Dantsker, David; Juszczak, Laura J et al. (2004) Spectroscopic and functional characterization of T state hemoglobin conformations encapsulated in silica gels. Biochemistry 43:13674-82
Peterson, Eric S; Shinder, Roman; Khan, Imran et al. (2004) Domain-specific effector interactions within the central cavity of human adult hemoglobin in solution and in porous sol-gel matrices: evidence for long-range communication pathways. Biochemistry 43:4832-43
Hui, Hilda L; Kwiatkowski, Laura D; Karasik, Ellen et al. (2004) Ligand binding to symmetrical FeZn hybrids of variants of human HbA with modifications in the alpha1-beta2 interface. Biochemistry 43:7843-50

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