4.8 Article

Mycobacterium tuberculosis hemoglobin N displays a protein tunnel suited for O2 diffusion to the heme

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 15, Pages 3902-3909

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/emboj/20.15.3902

Keywords

hemoprotein structure; macrophage oxidative stress; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; nitric oxide; truncated hemoglobins

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Macrophage-generated oxygen- and nitrogen-reactive species control the development of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in the host. Mycobacterium tuberculosis 'truncated hemoglobin' N (trHbN) has been related to nitric oxide (NO) detoxification, in response to macrophage nitrosative stress, during the bacterium latent infection stage. The three-dimensional structure of oxygenated trHbN, solved at 1.9 A resolution, displays the two-over-two alpha -helical sandwich fold recently characterized in two homologous truncated hemoglobins, featuring an extra N-terminal (x-helix and homodimeric assembly. In the absence of a polar distal E7 residue, the O-2 heme ligand is stabilized by two hydrogen bonds to TyrB10(33). Strikingly, ligand diffusion to the heme in trHbN may occur via an apolar tunnel/cavity system extending for similar to 28 Angstrom through the protein matrix, connecting the heme distal cavity to two distinct protein surface sites. This unique structural feature appears to be conserved in several homologous truncated hemoglobins. It is proposed that in trHbN, heme Fe/O-2 stereochemistry and the protein matrix tunnel may promote O-2/NO chemistry in vivo, as a M. tuberculosis defense mechanism against macrophage nitrosative stress.

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