posted on 2005-06-01, 00:00authored byMarcelo A. Martí, Luciana Capece, Alejandro Crespo, Fabio Doctorovich, Dario A. Estrin
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), the mammalian receptor for nitric oxide (NO), is a heme protein
with a histidine as the proximal ligand. Formation of a five-coordinate heme−NO complex with the associated
Fe−His bond cleavage is believed to trigger a conformational change that activates the enzyme and
transduces the NO signal. Cytochrome c‘ (cyt c‘) is a protobacteria heme protein that has several similarities
with sGC, including the ability to form a five-coordinate NO adduct and the fact that it does not bind oxygen.
Recent crystallographic characterization of cyt c‘ from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (AXCP) has yielded the
discovery that exogenous ligands are able to bind to the Fe center from either side of the porphyrin plane.
In this paper, we explore the molecular basis of the NO interaction with AXCP using hybrid quantum-classical simulation techniques. Our results suggest that Fe−His bond breaking depends not only on the
iron−histidine bond strength but also on the existence of a local minimum conformation of the protein with
the histidine away from the iron. We also show that AXCP is a useful paradigm for NO interaction with
heme proteins, particularly regarding the activation/deactivation mechanism of sGC. The results presented
here fully support a recently proposed model of sGC activation in which NO is not only the iron ligand but
also catalyzes the activation step.