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Comparative Study
. 1991;4(2):119-25.
doi: 10.1007/BF01135389.

Studies on the bacterial hemoglobin from Vitreoscilla. Redox properties and spectroscopic characterization of the different forms of the hemoprotein

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Studies on the bacterial hemoglobin from Vitreoscilla. Redox properties and spectroscopic characterization of the different forms of the hemoprotein

P M Kroneck et al. Biol Met. 1991.

Abstract

Vitreoscilla contained a homodimeric bacterial hemoglobin (VtHb). The purification of this protein yielded VtmetHb which exhibited electronic and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra, showing that it existed predominantly in a high-spin ferric form, both axial and rhombic components being present. The preparations also contained variable amounts of low-spin components. There was no evidence that these high-spin and low-spin forms were in equilibrium. The former were reducible by NADH catalyzed by the NADH-metVtHb reductase, and the latter were not. High ionic strength and high pH led to the formation of low-spin metVtHb; both treatments were reversible. Cyanide and imidazole liganded to VtHb resulted in the conversion of high-spin to low-spin ferric heme centers, each with characteristic electronic and EPR spectra. Some preparations of VtHb exhibited EPR signals consistent with a sulfur ligand bound to the ferric site. When VtHb was treated with NADH plus the reductase in the presence of oxygen, the intensity of the high-spin EPR signals decreased significantly. No reduction occurred in the absence of oxygen, suggesting a possible role for the superoxide anion. Dithionite treatment of VtHb resulted in a slow reduction, but the main product of the reaction of dithionite-reduced VtHb with oxygen was VtmetHb, not VtHbO2. EPR spectra of whole cells of Vitreoscilla exhibited a variety of intense signals at low and high magnetic field, the g-values being consistent with the presence of high-spin ferric heme proteins, in addition to an iron-containing superoxide dismutase (FeSOD) and iron-sulfur proteins. EPR spectra of the cytosol fraction of Vitreoscilla showed the expected resonances for VtmetHb and FeSOD.

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