Dynamics of carbon monoxide binding to CooA

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Abstract

CooA is a dimeric CO-sensing heme protein from Rhodospirillum rubrum. The heme iron in reduced CooA is six-coordinate; the axial ligands are His-77 and Pro-2. CO displaces Pro-2 and induces a conformation change that allows CooA to bind DNA and activate transcription of coo genes. Equilibrium CO binding is cooperative, with a Hill coefficient of n = 1.4, P50 = 2.2 μM, and estimated Adair constants K1 = 0.16 and K2 = 1.3 μM-1. The rates of CO binding and release are both strongly biphasic, with roughly equal amplitudes for the fast and slow phases. The association rates show a hyperbolic dependence on [CO], consistent with Pro-2 dissociation being rate-limiting. The kinetic characteristics of the transiently formed five-coordinate heme are probed via flash photolysis. These observations are integrated into a kinetic model, in which CO binding to one subunit decreases the rate of Pro-2 rebinding in the second, leading to a net increase in affinity for the second CO. The CO adduct exists in slowly interconverting "open" and "closed" forms. This interconversion probably involves the large-scale motions required to bring the DNA-binding domains into proper orientation. The combination of low CO affinity, slow CO binding, and slow conformational transitions ensures that activation of CooA only occurs at high (micromolar) and sustained (≥1 min) levels of CO. When micromolar levels do occur, positive cooperativity allows efficient activation over a narrow range of CO concentrations.

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Puranik, M., Nielsen, S. B., Youn, H., Hvitved, A. N., Bourassa, J. L., Case, M. A., … Spiro, T. G. (2004). Dynamics of carbon monoxide binding to CooA. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(20), 21096–21108. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M400613200

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