Proton NMR spectroscopy of sulfmyoglobin

Abstract
The 1H NMR spectra of ferrous sulfmyoglobin, metsulmyoglobin, and ferric cyanosulfmyoglobin were obtained at 300 MHz. Hyperfine-shifted resonances are observed in the case of metsulmyoglobin and ferric cyanosulfmyoglobin that have line widths and cover a chemical shift range that are comparable to the corresponding forms of normal myoglobin. Two methyl resonances are observed in the spectrum of ferric cyanosulfmyoglobin at 44.19 and 25.48 ppm (25.degree. C, pH* 8.3) that have been assigned to heme methyls at the 8- and 5-positions on the basis of pH titration effects homologous to the corresponding methyl resonances in ferric cyanomyoglobin. Examination of aromatic region resonances and the pH titration profiles of histidine resonances lead to the conclusion that the overall conformation of sulfmyoglobin was highly homologous to that of normal myoglobin and afforded assignments of histidine residues of the former. The most likely position for the addition of a sulfur atom to the heme of sulfmyoglobin is pyrrole ring A, with ring B a possible, but less likely, alternative.