화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.117, No.10, 2850-2863, 2013
Photoexcitation Dynamics of NO-Bound Ferric Myoglobin Investigated by Femtosecond Vibrational Spectroscopy
Femtosecond vibrational spectroscopy was used to investigate the photoexcitation dynamics of NO-bound ferric myoglobin (Mb(III)NO) in D2O solution at 294 K after excitation with a 575 nm pulse. The stretching mode of NO in Mb(III)NO consists of a major band at 1922 cm(-1) (97.7%) and a minor band at 1902 cm(-1) (2.3%), suggesting that Mb(III)NO in room temperature solution has two conformational substates. The time-resolved spectra show small but significant new absorption features at the lower-energy side of the main band (1920-1800 cm(-1)). One new absorption feature in the region of 1920-1880 cm(-1) exhibits the (NO)-N-15 isotope shift (37 cm(-1)) the same as that of the NO band in the ground electronic state of MONO. This absorption shifts toward higher energy and narrows with a time constant of 2.4 ps, indicating that it evolves with rapid electronic and thermal relaxation of the photoexcited Mb(III)NO without photodeligation of the NO from the heme. Absorption features assigned to proteins undergoing thermal relaxation without NO deligation add up to 14 +/- 1% of the total bleach, implying that the photolysis quantum yield of Mb(III)NO with a Q:band excitation is <= 0.86 +/- 0.01. The remaining absorption bands peaked near 1867, 1845, and 1815 cm(-1), each showing the (NO)-N-15 isotope shift the same as that of the free NO radical (33 cm(-1)), were assigned to the vibrational band of the photodeligated NO, the NO band of Mb(III)NO in an intermediate electronic state with low spin Fe(III)-NO(radical) character (denoted as the R state), and the NO band of the vibrationally excited NO in the R state, respectively. A kinetics model successfully reproducing the time-dependent intensity changes of the transient bands suggests that every rebound NO forms the R state that eventually relaxes into the ground electronic state nonexponentially. Most of the photodissociated NO undergoes fast geminate recombination (GR), and the rebinding kinetics depends on the conformation of the protein. GR of NO to Mb(III) in the major conformation shows highly nonexponential kinetics described by a stretched exponential function, exp(-(t/290 ps)(0.44). The NO rebinding to Mb(III) in the minor conformation is exponential, exp(-t/1.8 ns), suggesting that the distal histidine, the interaction of which dictates the conformation of MONO, participates in mediating the binding of NO to MO. In Mb(III)NO, the elusive low-spin Fe(III)-NO(radical) state, proposed in electronic structure calculations, indeed exists at >12 kJ/mol above the ground state and takes part in the bond formation of Fe(III)-NO, suggesting that it plays a significant role in the function of NO bound ferric protein. Time resolved vibrational spectra with high sensitivity reveal rich photophysical and photochemical processes of photoexcited Mb(III)NO.