posted on 2015-07-08, 00:00authored byJeanine
F. Amacher, Fangfang Zhong, George
P. Lisi, Michael Q. Zhu, Stephanie L. Alden, Kevin R. Hoke, Dean R. Madden, Ekaterina V. Pletneva
It
has been suggested that the alkaline form of cytochrome c (cyt c) regulates function of this protein
as an electron carrier in oxidative phosphorylation and as a peroxidase
that reacts with cardiolipin (CL) during apoptosis. In this form,
Met80, the native ligand to the heme iron, is replaced by a Lys. While
it has become clear that the structure of cyt c changes,
the extent and sequence of conformational rearrangements associated
with this ligand replacement remain a subject of debate. Herein we
report a high-resolution crystal structure of a Lys73-ligated cyt c conformation that reveals intricate change in the heme
environment upon this switch in the heme iron ligation. The structure
is surprisingly compact, and the heme coordination loop refolds into
a β-hairpin with a turn formed by the highly conserved residues
Pro76 and Gly77. Repositioning of residue 78 modifies the intraprotein
hydrogen-bonding network and, together with adjustments of residues
52 and 74, increases the volume of the heme pocket to allow for insertion
of one of the CL acyl moieties next to Asn52. Derivatization of Cys78
with maleimide creates a solution mimic of the Lys-ligated cyt c that has enhanced peroxidase activity, adding support
for a role of the Lys-ligated cyt c in the apoptotic
mechanism. Experiments with the heme peptide microperoxidase-8 and
engineered model proteins provide a thermodynamic rationale for the
switch to Lys ligation upon perturbations in the protein scaffold.