These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Solvent composition and viscosity effects on the kinetics of CO binding to horse myoglobin.
    Author: Kleinert T, Doster W, Leyser H, Petry W, Schwarz V, Settles M.
    Journal: Biochemistry; 1998 Jan 13; 37(2):717-33. PubMed ID: 9425096.
    Abstract:
    Ligand binding to myoglobin in aqueous solution involves two kinetic components, one extramolecular and one intramolecular, which have been interpreted in terms of two sequential kinetic barriers. In mixed solvents and sub-zero temperatures, the outer barrier increases and the inner barrier splits into several components, giving rise to fast intramolecular recombination. The nature of these barriers and their relation to structural relaxation are examined using the effect of solvent composition and viscosity on the kinetics of CO binding to horse myoglobin in 60% ethylene glycol/water, 75% and 90% glycerol/water, 80% and 92% sucrose/water solutions. Measurements of the corresponding solvent structural relaxation rates by frequency resolved calorimetry allow us to discriminate between solvent composition and viscosity-related effects. The outer kinetic barrier controlling ligand entry and release depends on the viscosity consistent with Kramers-Stokes law of activated escape in the presence of friction. At high cosolvent concentration, we observe deviations from Stokes law, implying a smaller microviscosity at the protein-solvent interface as compared to the bulk. The inner barrier and its coupling to structural relaxation appears to be independent of viscosity but changes with solvent composition. As a possible explanation, we discuss the role of distal water molecules in the formation of the effective inner barrier. At low temperatures, this barrier has a distributed height, depending only slightly on the nature of the cosolvent and temperature at low cosolvent concentrations. In contrast, myoglobin embedded in a sucrose glass (92% sucrose/water) exhibits a temperature-dependent and bimodal enthalpy distribution. This result demonstrates that the exchange between protonation states of His64, A0 left and right arrow A1, can take place in the glass and at temperatures as low as 80 K.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]