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Oxygen and One Reducing Equivalent Are Both Required for the Conversion of α-Hydroxyhemin to Verdoheme in Heme Oxygenase
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1996
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Carbon Monoxide BiosynthesisBiosynthesisEngineeringBiochemistryHeme DegradationOptical AbsorptionHeme SignalingCatalysisRedox ChemistryHeme HomeostasisMedicineHeme OxygenaseRedox BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringOxidative Stress
Heme oxygenase is a central enzyme of heme degradation and associated carbon monoxide biosynthesis. We have prepared the alpha-hydroxyheme-heme oxygenase complex, which is the first intermediate in the catalytic reaction. The active site structure of the complex was examined by optical absorption, EPR, and resonance Raman spectroscopies. In the ferric form of the enzyme complex, the heme iron is five coordinate high spin and the alpha-hydroxyheme group in the complex assumes a structure of an oxophlorin where the alpha-meso hydroxy group is deprotonated. In the ferrous form, the alpha-hydroxy group is protonated and consequently the prosthetic group assumes a porphyrin structure. The alpha-hydroxyheme group undergoes a redox-linked conversion between a keto and an enol form. The ferric alpha-hydroxyheme reacts with molecular oxygen to form a radical species. Reaction of the radical species with a reducing equivalent yields the verdoheme-heme oxygenase complex. Reaction of the ferrous alpha-hydroxyheme-heme oxygenase complex with oxygen also yields the verdoheme-enzyme complex. We conclude that the catalytic conversion of ferric alpha-hydroxyheme to verdoheme by heme oxygenase requires molecular oxygen and one reducing equivalent.