RESUMO
The role of a flattened, relatively hydrophobic surface patch in the self-association of Chromatium vinosum HiPIP was assessed by substituting phenylalanine 48 with lysine. The reduction potential of the F48K variant was 26 mV higher than that of the wild-type (WT) recombinant (rc) HiPIP, consistent with the introduction of a positive charge close to the cluster. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) revealed that the electronic structure of the oxidized cluster in these two proteins is very similar at 295 K. In contrast, the electron transfer self-exchange rate constant of F48K was at least 15-fold lower than that of the WT rcHiPIP, indicating that the introduction of a positive charge at position 48 diminishes self-association of the HiPIP in solution. Moreover, the substitution at position 48 abolished the fine structure in the g(z) region of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of oxidized C. vinosum rcHiPIP recorded in the presence of 1 M sodium chloride. These results support the hypothesis that the flattened, relatively hydrophobic patch mediates interaction between two molecules of HiPIP and that freezing-induced dimerization of the HiPIP mediated by this patch is responsible for the unusual fine structure observed in the EPR spectrum of the oxidized C. vinosum HiPIP.