4.6 Article

Structural flexibility of the heme cavity in the cold-adapted truncated hemoglobin from the Antarctic marine bacterium Pseudoalteromonashaloplanktis TAC125

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 282, Issue 15, Pages 2948-2965

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/febs.13335

Keywords

adaptation; bacterial hemoglobin; molecular dynamics; resonance Raman; X-ray structure

Funding

  1. Italian National Programme for Antarctic Research (PNRA)
  2. Italian Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Universita e della Ricerca (MIUR) [PRIN 2007SFZXZ7]
  3. CONICET

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Truncated hemoglobins build one of the three branches of the globin protein superfamily. They display a characteristic two-on-two -helical sandwich fold and are clustered into three groups (I, II and III) based on distinct structural features. Truncated hemoglobins are present in eubacteria, cyanobacteria, protozoa and plants. Here we present a structural, spectroscopic and molecular dynamics characterization of a group-II truncated hemoglobin, encoded by the PSHAa0030 gene from Pseudoalteromonashaloplanktis TAC125 (Ph-2/2HbO), a cold-adapted Antarctic marine bacterium hosting one flavohemoglobin and three distinct truncated hemoglobins. The Ph-2/2HbO aquo-met crystal structure (at 2.21 angstrom resolution) shows typical features of group-II truncated hemoglobins, namely the two-on-two -helical sandwich fold, a helix preceding the proximal helix F, and a heme distal-site hydrogen-bonded network that includes water molecules and several distal-site residues, including His(58)CD1. Analysis of Ph-2/2HbO by electron paramagnetic resonance, resonance Raman and electronic absorption spectra, under varied solution conditions, shows that Ph-2/2HbO can access diverse heme ligation states. Among these, detection of a low-spin heme hexa-coordinated species suggests that residue Tyr(42)B10 can undergo large conformational changes in order to act as the sixth heme-Fe ligand. Altogether, the results show that Ph-2/2HbO maintains the general structural features of group-II truncated hemoglobins but displays enhanced conformational flexibility in the proximity of the heme cavity, a property probably related to the functional challenges, such as low temperature, high O-2 concentration and low kinetic energy of molecules, experienced by organisms living in the Antarctic environment. DatabaseStructural data have been submitted to the Protein Data Bank under accession numbers and R4UURS

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