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. 1988 Jul 26;27(15):5400-7.
doi: 10.1021/bi00415a003.

A nuclear Overhauser effect study of the heme crevice in the resting state and compound I of horseradish peroxidase: evidence for cation radical delocalization to the proximal histidine

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A nuclear Overhauser effect study of the heme crevice in the resting state and compound I of horseradish peroxidase: evidence for cation radical delocalization to the proximal histidine

V Thanabal et al. Biochemistry. .

Abstract

The assignment of resolved hyperfine-shifted resonances in high-spin resting state horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and its double-oxidized reactive form, compound I (HRP-I), has been carried out by using the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) starting with the known heme methyl assignments in each species. In spite of the efficient spin-lattice relaxation and very broad resonances, significant NOEs were observed for all neighboring pyrrole substituents, which allowed the assignment of the elusive propionate alpha-methylene protons. In the resting state HRP, this leads directly to the identity of the proximal His-170 H beta peaks. The determination that one of the most strongly contact-shifted single proton resonances in HRP-I does not arise from the porphyrin dictates that the cation radical must be delocalized to some amino acid residue. The relaxation properties of the non-heme contact-shifted signal in HRP-I support the identity of this contributing residue as the proximal His-170. Detailed analysis of changes in both contact shift pattern and NOEs indicates that compound I formation is accompanied by a approximately 5 degree rotation of the 6-propionate group. The implication of a porphyrin cation radical delocalized over the proximal histidine for the proposed location of the solely amino acid centered radical in compound I of related cytochrome c peroxidase is discussed.

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