Oxymyoglobin
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| The binding of O<sub>2</sub> pulls on the Fe<sup>2+</sup> counter balancing the tug of His so that the center of Fe<sup>2+</sup> is positioned closer to the plane of the porphyrin ring.  The Fe<sup>2+</sup> is 0.055 nm above the porphyrin plane in myoglobin, whereas it is 0.026 nm above the plane in oxymyoglobin.   His 93 remains attached to the Fe<sup>2+</sup>, and it moves to a more perpendicular position as it moves along with the Fe<sup>2+</sup>.  The movement of the His forces a nearby residue to move, and all this side chain movement results in a <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/F_helix/1'>conformation change of the complete F helix</scene>. An animation of this conformation change can be seen in the context of a [[User:Jaime_Prilusky/How_do_we_get_the_oxygen_we_breathe|hemoglobin monomer]], go to the subtopic 'Capturing Oxygen', select the 'context of an entire monomer' green link and toggle animation on if necessary.  The consequences of this movement for myoglobin is trivial, but for hemoglobin, since it is a tetramer, it is quite consequential, as described at the  [[User:Jaime_Prilusky/How_do_we_get_the_oxygen_we_breathe|link above]]. | The binding of O<sub>2</sub> pulls on the Fe<sup>2+</sup> counter balancing the tug of His so that the center of Fe<sup>2+</sup> is positioned closer to the plane of the porphyrin ring.  The Fe<sup>2+</sup> is 0.055 nm above the porphyrin plane in myoglobin, whereas it is 0.026 nm above the plane in oxymyoglobin.   His 93 remains attached to the Fe<sup>2+</sup>, and it moves to a more perpendicular position as it moves along with the Fe<sup>2+</sup>.  The movement of the His forces a nearby residue to move, and all this side chain movement results in a <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/F_helix/1'>conformation change of the complete F helix</scene>. An animation of this conformation change can be seen in the context of a [[User:Jaime_Prilusky/How_do_we_get_the_oxygen_we_breathe|hemoglobin monomer]], go to the subtopic 'Capturing Oxygen', select the 'context of an entire monomer' green link and toggle animation on if necessary.  The consequences of this movement for myoglobin is trivial, but for hemoglobin, since it is a tetramer, it is quite consequential, as described at the  [[User:Jaime_Prilusky/How_do_we_get_the_oxygen_we_breathe|link above]]. | ||
| - | <Structure load='1mbo' size='500' frame='true' align='right' caption='Structure of oxymyoglobin (PDB entry [[1mbo]])' scene='Oxymyoglobin/F_helix/1' /> | ||
| <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/His_64/3'>His 64</scene> is located on the same side of the heme as molecular oxygen but is not close enough to the Fe<sup>2+</sup> for its nitrogen to chelate with Fe<sup>2+</sup>, but it is close enough to the heme to hydrogen bond with the O<sub>2</sub>, remember that hydrogens are not displayed in this model. | <scene name='Oxymyoglobin/His_64/3'>His 64</scene> is located on the same side of the heme as molecular oxygen but is not close enough to the Fe<sup>2+</sup> for its nitrogen to chelate with Fe<sup>2+</sup>, but it is close enough to the heme to hydrogen bond with the O<sub>2</sub>, remember that hydrogens are not displayed in this model. | ||
Revision as of 09:39, 8 April 2013
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Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)
Karl Oberholser, Alexander Berchansky, Michal Harel, Eran Hodis
