Karunakaran, Venugopal Benabbas, Abdelkrim Youn, Hwan Champion, Paul M. Vibrational Coherence Spectroscopy of the Heme Domain in the CO-Sensing Transcriptional Activator CooA Femtosecond vibrational coherence spectroscopy was used to investigate the low-frequency vibrational dynamics of the heme in the carbon monoxide oxidation activator protein (CooA) from the thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans (Ch-CooA). Low frequency vibrational modes are important because they are excited by the ambient thermal bath (<i>k</i><sub>B</sub><i>T</i> = 200 cm<sup>–1</sup>) and participate in thermally activated barrier crossing events. However, such modes are nearly impossible to detect in the aqueous phase using traditional spectroscopic methods. Here, we present the low frequency coherence spectra of the ferric, ferrous, and CO-bound forms of Ch-CooA in order to compare the protein-induced heme distortions in its active and inactive states. Distortions take place predominantly along the coordinates of low-frequency modes because of their weak force constants, and such distortions are reflected in the intensity of the vibrational coherence signals. A strong mode near ∼90 cm<sup>–1</sup> in the ferrous form of Ch-CooA is suggested to contain a large component of heme ruffling, consistent with the imidazole-bound ferrous heme crystal structure, which shows a significant protein-induced heme distortion along this coordinate. A mode observed at ∼228 cm<sup>–1</sup> in the six-coordinate ferrous state is proposed to be the ν(Fe–His) stretching vibration. The observation of the Fe–His mode indicates that photolysis of the N-terminal α-amino axial ligand takes place. This is followed by a rapid (∼8.5 ps) transient absorption recovery, analogous to methionine rebinding in photolyzed ferrous cytochrome <i>c</i>. We have also studied CO photolysis in CooA, which revealed very strong photoproduct state coherent oscillations. The observation of heme-CO photoproduct oscillations is unusual because most other heme systems have CO rebinding kinetics that are too slow to make the measurement possible. The low frequency coherence spectrum of the CO-bound form of Ch-CooA shows a strong vibration at ∼230 cm<sup>–1</sup> that is broadened and up-shifted compared to the ν(Fe–His) of Rr-CooA (216 cm<sup>–1</sup>). We propose that the stronger Fe–His bond is related to the enhanced thermal stability of Ch-CooA and that there is a smaller (time dependent) tilt of the histidine ring with respect to the heme plane in Ch-CooA. The appearance of strong modes at ∼48 cm<sup>–1</sup> in both the ferrous and CO-bound forms of Ch-CooA is consistent with coupling of the heme doming distortion to the photolysis reaction in both samples. Upon CO binding and protein activation, a heme mode near 112 ± 5 cm<sup>–1</sup> disappears, probably indicating a decreased heme saddling distortion. This reflects changes in the heme environment and geometry that must be associated with the conformational transition activating the DNA-binding domain. Protein-specific DNA binding to the CO-bound form of Ch-CooA was also investigated, and although the CO rebinding kinetics are significantly perturbed, there are negligible changes in the low-frequency vibrational spectrum of the heme. protein activation;Low frequency vibrational modes;vibrational dynamics;heme mode;vibrational coherence signals;ferrous form;absorption recovery;photolysis reaction;heme doming distortion;CO binding;force constants;DNA;heme systems;bacterium Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans;histidine ring;Vibrational Coherence Spectroscopy;heme ruffling;CO photolysis;frequency coherence spectrum;carbon monoxide oxidation activator protein;cm;heme environment;CO rebinding kinetics;vibrational spectrum;spectroscopic methods;methionine rebinding;heme plane;photolyzed ferrous cytochrome c;frequency coherence spectra;photoproduct state;Heme Domain 2011-11-23
    https://acs.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Vibrational_Coherence_Spectroscopy_of_the_Heme_Domain_in_the_CO_Sensing_Transcriptional_Activator_CooA/2580553
10.1021/ja206152m.s001