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Internal electric field in cytochrome C explored by visible electronic circular dichroism spectroscopy
Journal article   Open access

Internal electric field in cytochrome C explored by visible electronic circular dichroism spectroscopy

Reinhard Schweitzer-Stenner
The journal of physical chemistry. B, v 112(33), pp 10358-10366
21 Aug 2008
PMID: 18665633
url
https://doi.org/10.1002/pra2.2015.145052010018View
Published, Version of Record (VoR)Maybe Open Access (Publisher Bronze) Open

Abstract

Molecular Conformation Electronics Models, Statistical Circular Dichroism - methods Cytochromes c - chemistry Animals Heme - chemistry Cattle Myocardium - metabolism Oxygen - chemistry Horses Electrochemistry - methods Hydrogen-Ion Concentration Yeasts - metabolism
Electronic circular dichroism (ECD) is a valuable tool to explore the secondary and tertiary structure of proteins. With respect to heme proteins, the corresponding visible ECD spectra, which probe the chirality of the heme environment, have been used to explore functionally relevant structural changes in the heme vicinity. While the physical basis of the obtained ECD signal has been analyzed by Woody and co-workers in terms of multiple electronic coupling mechanism between the electronic transitions of the heme chromophore and of the protein (Hsu, M.C.; Woody, R.W. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1971, 93, 3515), a theory for a detailed quantitative analysis of ECD profiles has only recently been developed (Schweitzer-Stenner, R.; Gorden, J. P.; Hagarman, A. J. Chem. Phys. 2007, 127, 135103). In the present study this theory is applied to analyze the visible ECD-spectra of both oxidation states of three cytochromes c from horse, cow and yeast. The results reveal that both B- and Q-bands are subject to band splitting, which is caused by a combination of electronic and vibronic perturbations. The B-band splittings are substantially larger than the corresponding Q-band splittings in both oxidation states. For the B-bands, the electronic contribution to the band splitting can be assigned to the internal electric field in the heme pocket, whereas the corresponding Q-band splitting is likely to reflect its gradient (Manas, E. S.; Vanderkooi, J. M.; Sharp, K. A. J. Phys. Chem. B 1999, 103, 6344). We found that the electronic and vibronic splitting is substantially larger in the oxidized than in the reduced state. Moreover, these states exhibit different signs of electronic splitting. These findings suggest that the oxidation process increases the internal electric field and changes its orientation with respect to the molecular coordinate system associated with the N-Fe-N lines of the heme group. For the reduced state, we used our data to calculate electric field strengths between 27 and 31 MV/cm for the investigated cytochrome c species. The field of the oxidized state is more difficult to estimate, owing to the lack of information about its orientation in the heme plane. Based on band splitting and the wavenumber of the band position we estimated a field-strength of ca. 40 MV/cm for oxidized horse heart cytochrome c. The thus derived difference between the field strengths of the oxidized and reduced state would contribute at least -55 kJ/mol to the enthalpic stabilization of the oxidized state. Our data indicate that the corresponding stabilization energy of yeast cytochrome c is smaller.

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Web of Science research areas
Chemistry, Physical
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