Oxymyoglobin
From Proteopedia
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Oxymyoglobin is the oxygenated form of [[myoglobin]] which is a single chain globular protein. The physiological function of myoglobin is to store molecular oxygen in muscle tissue so that there is a reserve of O<sub>2</sub> over and above that bound to the [[hemoglobin]] in the blood. The major structural difference in the two forms of the protein is that O<sub>2</sub> is bound to the heme in oxymyoglobin whereas it is not in myoglobin. This article will gave an overview of the structural similarities of the two forms as well as a more detailed description of the structural differences. | Oxymyoglobin is the oxygenated form of [[myoglobin]] which is a single chain globular protein. The physiological function of myoglobin is to store molecular oxygen in muscle tissue so that there is a reserve of O<sub>2</sub> over and above that bound to the [[hemoglobin]] in the blood. The major structural difference in the two forms of the protein is that O<sub>2</sub> is bound to the heme in oxymyoglobin whereas it is not in myoglobin. This article will gave an overview of the structural similarities of the two forms as well as a more detailed description of the structural differences. | ||
| + | == Structural Similarities of the Two Forms == | ||
<StructureSection load='1mbo' size='490' side='right' caption='Structure of Oxymyoglobin (PDB entry [[1mbo]])' scene='Oxymyoglobin/Initial/1'> | <StructureSection load='1mbo' size='490' side='right' caption='Structure of Oxymyoglobin (PDB entry [[1mbo]])' scene='Oxymyoglobin/Initial/1'> | ||
| - | === Similarities to Myoglobin=== | ||
Oxymyoglobin is shown with layers of <font color=red>water</font> bound to its surface. This water is strongly attracted to the protein and is part of the structure of any crystalline protein. Hiding the <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Water_removed/1'>water</scene> reveals that the overall tertiary shape is much like a hockey puck. The <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Secondary_structure/1'>α-helix</scene> is a prominent secondary structural component. The [[Myoglobin]] page gives more detail on the secondary structure. The а-helices can be shown to form <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Two_layers/2'>two layers of backbone</scene>, and myoglobin can be classified as an antiparallel α-helix type of globular protein. The <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Rama/1'>Ramachandran plot</scene> shows most of the residues involved in an α-helix are clustered in the area of the plot where one would expect them to be. (Review [[Ramachandran Plot]].) Many of the residues that are outside of the expected cluster are at the end of a helix, and it is not unusual for such residues to have ψ and φ values that are outside of the range for the α-helix. Also notice that many of the residues that are in the quadrants on the right are Gly. (Residues can be identified by hovering over the sphere with the cursor.) The [[prosthetic group]] of myoglobin is a <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme/2'>heme</scene>, and as shown here it is inserted into a pocket which is nonpolar. Except for the two carboxylate groups on the one edge the heme has a <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme_alone1/3'>nonpolar surface</scene>. Detailed description of [[Porphyrin|heme]] structure. <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/His_93/4'>His 93</scene> is chelated to Fe<sup>2+</sup> on one side of the heme. | Oxymyoglobin is shown with layers of <font color=red>water</font> bound to its surface. This water is strongly attracted to the protein and is part of the structure of any crystalline protein. Hiding the <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Water_removed/1'>water</scene> reveals that the overall tertiary shape is much like a hockey puck. The <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Secondary_structure/1'>α-helix</scene> is a prominent secondary structural component. The [[Myoglobin]] page gives more detail on the secondary structure. The а-helices can be shown to form <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Two_layers/2'>two layers of backbone</scene>, and myoglobin can be classified as an antiparallel α-helix type of globular protein. The <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Rama/1'>Ramachandran plot</scene> shows most of the residues involved in an α-helix are clustered in the area of the plot where one would expect them to be. (Review [[Ramachandran Plot]].) Many of the residues that are outside of the expected cluster are at the end of a helix, and it is not unusual for such residues to have ψ and φ values that are outside of the range for the α-helix. Also notice that many of the residues that are in the quadrants on the right are Gly. (Residues can be identified by hovering over the sphere with the cursor.) The [[prosthetic group]] of myoglobin is a <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme/2'>heme</scene>, and as shown here it is inserted into a pocket which is nonpolar. Except for the two carboxylate groups on the one edge the heme has a <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme_alone1/3'>nonpolar surface</scene>. Detailed description of [[Porphyrin|heme]] structure. <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/His_93/4'>His 93</scene> is chelated to Fe<sup>2+</sup> on one side of the heme. | ||
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| - | === Differences from Myoglobin === | ||
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| - | <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Molecular_oxygen/2'>Molecular oxygen</scene> is chelated to Fe<sup>2+</sup> on the side of the heme opposite His 93. Fe<sup>2+</sup> in oxymyoglobin is chelated to six ligands whereas in myoglobin Fe<sup>2+</sup> has only five of the possible six positions occupied. The binding of O<sub>2</sub> does have an effect on the conformation of the myoglobin. View the <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme_on_edge/1'>heme on edge</scene>, and observe how much Fe<sup>2+</sup> is off set from being centered in the plane of the heme. Compare this displacement of Fe<sup>2+</sup> in oxymyoglobin to that in myoglobin by going to [[Myoglobin]], select 'View2:Heme Closeup' from the drop down menu on the right, rotate the image so that you are viewing the edge of the heme. Notice that the Fe<sup>2+</sup> is displaced to a greater extend in myoglobin than in oxymyoglobin, actually 0.055 nm in myoglobin and 0.026 nm in oxymyoglobin. Check the bottom most box on the right (It may be partially covered) in order to display His 93 which is responsible for pulling the Fe<sup>2+</sup> out of the plane of the heme. This tug of His is counter balanced with the <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme_93_oxy/1'>binding of O</scene><sub>2</sub>. <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/His_64/2'>His 64</scene> is located on the same side of the heme as molecular oxygen and is close enough to the heme to make contact with the O<sub>2</sub> but is not close enough to the Fe<sup>2+</sup> for its nitrogen to chelate with Fe<sup>2+</sup>. | ||
</StructureSection> | </StructureSection> | ||
| + | == Structural Differences of the Two Forms == | ||
| + | <StructureSection load='1mbo' size='490' side='right' caption='Structure of Oxymyoglobin (PDB entry [[1mbo]])' scene='Oxymyoglobin/Molecular_oxygen/2'> | ||
| + | <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Molecular_oxygen/2'>Molecular oxygen</scene> is chelated to Fe<sup>2+</sup> on the side of the heme opposite His 93. Fe<sup>2+</sup> in oxymyoglobin is chelated to six ligands whereas in myoglobin Fe<sup>2+</sup> has only five of the possible six positions occupied. The binding of O<sub>2</sub> does have an effect on the conformation of the myoglobin. View the <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme_on_edge/1'>heme on edge</scene>, and observe how much Fe<sup>2+</sup> is off set from being centered in the plane of the heme. Compare this displacement of Fe<sup>2+</sup> in oxymyoglobin to that in myoglobin by going to [[Myoglobin]], select 'View2:Heme Closeup' from the drop down menu on the right, rotate the image so that you are viewing the edge of the heme. Notice that the Fe<sup>2+</sup> is displaced to a greater extend in myoglobin than in oxymyoglobin, actually 0.055 nm in myoglobin and 0.026 nm in oxymyoglobin. Check the bottom most box on the right (It may be partially covered) in order to display His 93 which is responsible for pulling the Fe<sup>2+</sup> out of the plane of the heme. This tug of His is counter balanced with the <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/Heme_93_oxy/1'>binding of O</scene><sub>2</sub>. <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/His_64/2'>His 64</scene> is located on the same side of the heme as molecular oxygen and is close enough to the heme to make contact with the O<sub>2</sub> but is not close enough to the Fe<sup>2+</sup> for its nitrogen to chelate with Fe<sup>2+</sup>. | ||
Revision as of 18:03, 27 January 2011
Oxymyoglobin is the oxygenated form of myoglobin which is a single chain globular protein. The physiological function of myoglobin is to store molecular oxygen in muscle tissue so that there is a reserve of O2 over and above that bound to the hemoglobin in the blood. The major structural difference in the two forms of the protein is that O2 is bound to the heme in oxymyoglobin whereas it is not in myoglobin. This article will gave an overview of the structural similarities of the two forms as well as a more detailed description of the structural differences.
Structural Similarities of the Two Forms
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Structural Differences of the Two Forms
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Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)
Karl Oberholser, Alexander Berchansky, Michal Harel, Eran Hodis
