Cytoglobin is a hemoprotein widely expressed in fibroblasts and related cell lineages with yet undefined physiological function. Cytoglobin, as other heme proteins, can reduce nitrite to nitric oxide (NO) providing a route to generate NO in vivo in low oxygen conditions. In addition, cytoglobin can also bind lipids such as oleic acid and cardiolipin with high affinity. These two processes are potentially relevant to cytoglobin function. Little is known about how specific amino acids contribute to nitrite reduction and lipid binding. Here we investigate the role of the distal histidine His81 (E7) and several surface residues on the regulation of nitrite reduction and lipid binding. We observe that the replacement of His81 (E7) greatly increases heme reactivity towards nitrite, with nitrite reduction rate constants of up to 1100 M-1s-1 for the His81Ala mutant. His81 (E7) mutation causes a small decrease in lipid binding affinity, however experiments on the presence of imidazole indicate that His81 (E7) does not compete with the lipid for the binding site. Mutations of the surface residues Arg84 and Lys116 largely impair lipid binding. Our results suggest that dissociation of His81 (E7) from the heme mediates the formation of a hydrophobic cavity in the proximal heme side that can accommodate the lipid, with important contributions of the hydrophobic patch around residues Thr91, Val105, and Leu108, whereas the positive charges from Arg84 and Lys116 stabilize the carboxyl group of the fatty acid. Gain and loss-of-function mutations described here can serve as tools to study in vivo the physiological role of these putative cytoglobin functions.
Keywords: Cytoglobin; Nitric oxide; Nitrite reduction; Protein-lipid interaction.
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