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Title: High frequency dynamics in hemoglobin measured by magnetic relaxation dispersion. Author: Victor K, Van-Quynh A, Bryant RG. Journal: Biophys J; 2005 Jan; 88(1):443-54. PubMed ID: 15475581. Abstract: The magnetic relaxation dispersion profiles for formate, acetate, and water protons are reported for aqueous solutions of hemoglobin singly and doubly labeled with a nitroxide and mercury(II) ion at cysteines at beta-93. Using two spin labels, one nuclear and one electron spin, a long intramolecular vector is defined between the two beta-93 positions in the protein. The paramagnetic contributions to the observed 1H spin-lattice relaxation rate constant are isolated from the magnetic relaxation dispersion profiles obtained on a dual-magnet apparatus that provides spectral density functions characterizing fluctuations sensed by intermoment dipolar interactions in the time range from the tens of microseconds to approximately 1 ps. Both formate and acetate ions are found to bind specifically within 5 angstroms of the beta-93 spin-label position and the relaxation dispersion has inflection points corresponding to correlation times of 30 ps and 4 ns for both ions. The 4-ns motion is identified with exchange of the anions from the site, whereas the 30-ps correlation time is identified with relative motions of the spin label and the bound anion in the protein environment close to beta-93. The magnetic field dependence of the paramagnetic contributions in both cases is well described by a simple Lorentzian spectral density function; no peaks in the spectral density function are observed. Therefore, the high frequency motions of the protein monitored by the intramolecular vector defined by the electron and nuclear spin are well characterized by a stationary random function of time. Attempts to examine long vector fluctuations by employing electron spin and nuclear spin double-labeling techniques did not yield unambiguous characterization of the high frequency motions of the vector between beta-93 positions on different chains.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]