The ability of hemoproteins to discriminate between diatomic molecules, and the subsequent affinity for their chosen ligand, is fundamental to the existence of life. These processes are often controlled by precise structural arrangements in proteins, with heme pocket residues driving reactivity and specificity. One such protein is cytochrome c', which has the ability to bind nitric oxide (NO) and carbon monoxide (CO) on opposite faces of the heme, a property that is shared with soluble guanylate cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVitamin B(12) (cyanocobalamin, CNCbl) and its derivatives are structurally complex and functionally diverse biomolecules. The excited state and radical pair reaction dynamics that follow their photoexcitation have been previously studied in detail using UV-visible techniques. Similar time-resolved infrared (TRIR) data are limited, however.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArchaeal family B polymerases bind tightly to the deaminated bases uracil and hypoxanthine in single-stranded DNA, stalling replication on encountering these pro-mutagenic deoxynucleosides four steps ahead of the primer-template junction. When uracil is specifically bound, the polymerase-DNA complex exists in the editing rather than the polymerization conformation, despite the duplex region of the primer-template being perfectly base-paired. In this article, the interplay between the 3'-5' proofreading exonuclease activity and binding of uracil/hypoxanthine is addressed, using the family-B DNA polymerase from Pyrococcus furiosus.
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