Web Release Date: October 24,
Protein Conformational Relaxation and Ligand Migration in Myoglobin: A
Nanosecond to Millisecond Molecular Movie from Time-Resolved Laue X-ray
Diffraction
rajer,*










#
and

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Chicago, 920 East 58th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Consortium for Advanced Radiation Sources, The University of Chicago, 5640 South Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637, and European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, BP 220, 38043 Grenoble Cedex, France
Received April 6, 2001
Revised Manuscript Received August 20, 2001
This paper contains enhanced objects
available on the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
Abstract:
A time-resolved Laue X-ray diffraction technique has been used to explore protein relaxation
and ligand migration at room temperature following photolysis of a single crystal of carbon monoxymyoglobin. The CO ligand is photodissociated by a 7.5 ns laser pulse, and the subsequent structural
changes are probed by 150 ps or 1
s X-ray pulses at 14 laser/X-ray delay times, ranging from 1 ns to
1.9 ms. Very fast heme and protein relaxation involving the E and F helices is evident from the data at
a 1 ns time delay. The photodissociated CO molecules are detected at two locations: at a distal pocket
docking site and at the Xe 1 binding site in the proximal pocket. The population by CO of the primary,
distal site peaks at a 1 ns time delay and decays to half the peak value in 70 ns. The secondary, proximal
docking site reaches its highest occupancy of 20% at ~100 ns and has a half-life of ~10
s. At ~100 ns,
all CO molecules are accounted for within the protein: in one of these two docking sites or bound to the
heme. Thereafter, the CO molecules migrate to the solvent from which they rebind to deoxymyoglobin
in a bimolecular process with a second-order rate coefficient of 4.5 × 105 M-1 s-1. Our results also
demonstrate that structural changes as small as 0.2 Å and populations of CO docking sites of 10% can be
detected by time-resolved X-ray diffraction.
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