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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Chemistry
Chemists create synthetic
cytochromes
Jim
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
10/7/02
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — When animals metabolize food or when plants photosynthesize
it, electrons are moved across cell membranes. The "extension cords"
of this bioelectrical circuit are mostly iron-containing proteins called
cytochromes.
Chemist
Kenneth S. Suslick and colleagues at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
have created synthetic cytochromes by making a small cyclic peptide
that binds to the iron millions of times more strongly than without
the peptide. The scientists report their discovery in a paper in the
Oct. 23 issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
Cytochromes are heme proteins; that is, the iron is held in the central
hole of a doughnut-shaped heme. Related to hemoglobin and myoglobin
– the red-colored proteins that carry and store oxygen in blood
and muscles – cytochromes carry electrons rather than oxygen atoms.
"The heme is held very tightly in heme proteins, most commonly
by bonds between the iron ion and the amino acid histidine," said
Suslick, a William H. and Janet Lycan Professor of Chemistry at Illinois.
"This bond is much stronger in proteins than it is for a heme binding
free histidine. This makes cytochromes among the most stable of all
proteins."
Suslick and his colleagues expected that a cyclic peptide would hold
on to the iron ion heme like a tight ring on a finger. In fact, the
researchers found that their cyclic peptide binds to heme 6,000 times
more strongly than to two half-sized peptides that are not linked together,
and 4 million times more strongly than histidine itself.
"Most of this effect is called ‘preorganization,’ "
Suslick said. "By preforming the peptide ring, we make it much
easier for the peptide to bind the heme. In addition, the heme stabilizes
the structure of the cyclic peptide by making it fold into a perfect
helix."
The synergism of these effects helps explain the important role that
heme plays in making heme proteins so very stable. The heme holds the
protein structure together at the same time that the protein holds onto
the heme.
Such synthetic cytochromes may have pharmaceutical uses in the future.
"These heme-peptides are likely to carry electrons and ions across
cell membranes," Suslick said. "This could make them very
effective antibiotics, many of which kill bacteria by just this kind
of transport."
The National Institutes of Health funded this work.
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