Plant Physiol. (1998) 118: 1121-1125
Update on Biochemistry
Plant Hemoglobins
Raúl Arredondo-Peter,
Mark S. Hargrove,
José F. Moran,
Gautam Sarath, and
Robert V. Klucas*
Centro de Investigación sobre Fijación del Nitrógeno,
Apartado Postal 565-A, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico
(R.A.-P.); Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Iowa State
University, Ames, Iowa 50011 (M.S.H.); and Department of Biochemistry,
University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0664 (J.F.M., G.S.,
R.V.K.)
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Hbs are ubiquitous proteins in most organisms,
including bacteria, protozoans, fungi, plants, and animals (Vinogradov
et al., 1993
; Bolognesi et al., 1997
). The known and predicted roles of Hbs in each organism encompass functions that include the reversible binding of gaseous ligands and the ability to bind other cellular molecules.
 |
SYMBIOTIC AND NONSYMBIOTIC PLANT Hbs BELONG TO A LARGE
FAMILY OF RELATED PROTEINS |
Hbs are widely distributed in higher plants, and by
comparing sequences, expression patterns, and ligand-binding
properties, it is evident that these fall into two broad groups (Fig.
1; also see Andersson et al., 1996
). The
symbiotic-type Hbs are predominantly found in the infected cells of
nitrogen-fixing nodules of legumes and nonlegumes and function to
facilitate oxygen transport. The other group of plant Hbs, nonsymbiotic
Hbs, appear to be ancestral to the symbiotic Hbs, are more widespread
in the plant kingdom, and generally display a high affinity for oxygen.
Their function in plants is the subject of much current inquiry
(Appleby, 1992
; Andersson et al., 1996
; Arredondo-Peter et al., 1997a
;
Trevaskis et al., 1997
; Hill, 1998
). Some aspects of plant nonsymbiotic Hb function, particularly that of barley, have been succinctly reviewed
by Hill (1998)
.

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| Figure 1.
Dendrogram that shows the sequence relationships
between selected symbiotic and nonsymbiotic Hbs. Amino acid sequences
were obtained from the GenBank database, and alignment of the sequences
was done using the PILEUP program (Genetics Computer Group, Madison,
WI).
|
|
 |
SYMBIOTIC PLANT Hbs ARE PRESENT IN
NITROGEN-FIXING TISSUES AND FACILITATE OXYGEN DIFFUSION |
First identified in soybean root nodules, symbiotic plant Hbs have
been studied extensively and characterized from numerous legume
(Appleby, 1992
) and nonlegume species (Pathirana and Tjepkema, 1995
;
Suharjo and Tjepkema, 1995
). Appleby (1992)
is an excellent review for
an in-depth survey of the earlier literature.
The primary role of symbiotic Hbs appears to be the facilitation of
oxygen diffusion within infected tissues (Appleby, 1992
). This feature
is evidenced by a great accumulation of functional Hb in the target
tissues with high affinity for oxygen and a relatively fast
oxygen-dissociation rate, which permits low cellular concentrations of
free oxygen and a reasonable flux of oxygen within tissues actively
fixing nitrogen. The symbiotic Hbs from legumes, the Lbs, are the best
studied in this group and are discussed below.
Lbs in most legumes belong to multigene families
(Brisson and Verma, 1982
; Appleby, 1992
) and are encoded by genes that
have three introns. The first and third introns are positioned
similarly to the introns of vertebrate hb genes, which
suggests that plant and animal Hbs derived from a common ancestor.
Lbs are the most abundant soluble proteins in root nodules and are
frequently found as modified forms in vivo, which generally gives rise
to several closely related isoproteins. Modifications include
N-terminal acetylation, which does not affect ligand binding (Martin et
al., 1990
), and some type of modification to the heme (Jun et al.,
1994
), which prevents the formation of the ferrous-oxygen complex.
Heme-modified Lbs have been purified from mature soybean root nodules,
although the nature of the heme adduct has yet to be elucidated. The
presence of these apparently nonfunctional Lbs in root nodules could be
early indicators of the metabolic status of the nodule, and suggest
that mechanisms that cause heme modifications exist in nitrogen-fixing
root nodules (Jun et al., 1994
).
The crystal structures for lupin Lb (Harutyunyan et al., 1995
) and
wild-type and mutant soybean Lba have been published recently (Hargrove et al., 1997
). Crystal structure data indicate a structure very similar to the overall folds observed for other heme proteins such
as animal myoglobins and Hbs. There are seven
-helices that enclose
the iron-protoporphyrin IX prosthetic group. All Lbs contain the
proximal His that forms a single covalent interaction with the heme
group. Lbs also contain a distal His near the ligand-binding site
similar in location to the one found in most vertebrate myoglobins and
Hbs. However, it appears that this His plays a less critical role in
regulating ligand binding in Lbs than in other Hbs (Hargrove et al.,
1997
, and refs. therein). Lbs are inherently less stable than
vertebrate myoglobins due to much higher rates of autooxidation and
hemin dissociation (Hargrove et al., 1997
). The structural determinant
for these differences in stability is unknown, but might result from
the different requirements for ligand binding between these classes of
Hbs. However, the ability of the distal His to maintain heme within the
protein and to influence its ligand interactions has been suggested to
explain the high degree of conservation of this residue in all Hbs
(Hargrove et al., 1997
).
 |
NONSYMBIOTIC PLANT Hb GENES ARE STRUCTURALLY
SIMILAR TO SYMBIOTIC Hb GENES |
Parasponia andersonii, the only nonlegume known to be
infected by rhizobia, contains a Hb that is found in root nodules and roots (Bogusz et al., 1988
). This homodimeric protein is encoded by a
single gene that contains three introns that are positioned identically
to lb introns (Landsman et al., 1986
) and have
oxygen-binding kinetics similar to Lb, suggesting that its primary
function in nodules is oxygen transport (Gibson et al., 1989
). However,
the amino acid sequence of P. andersonii Hb differs
substantially from the other symbiotic plant Hbs and appears to more
closely resemble the nonsymbiotic Hbs (Fig. 1). Hb genes highly related to the P. andersonii hb have been cloned from Trema
tomentosa, a nonnodulating relative of P. andersonii
(Bogusz et al., 1988
), and from Casuarina glauca
(Jacobsen-Lyon et al., 1995
). The C. glauca nonsymbiotic
hb gene also contains three introns, but lacks the
nodulin-like regulatory motifs that direct the nodule-specific expression of the symbiotic hb genes (Jacobsen-Lyon et al.,
1995
).
Nonsymbiotic hb genes have recently been cloned and
sequenced from a number of other higher plants, including Arabidopsis (Trevaskis et al., 1997
), barley (Taylor et al., 1994
), rice
(Arredondo-Peter et al., 1997a
), and soybean (Andersson et al., 1996
).
The hb genes from rice have three introns at positions
identical to those of known plant hbs, suggesting that the
ancestral hb gene of flowering plants had three introns in
an identical location. All of the plants except barley contain two or
more nonsymbiotic hb genes that are differentially expressed
in the plant and code for proteins with potentially differing
biochemical properties. For example, the two Arabidopsis Hbs display
relatedness to the symbiotic group (AHb2) and the nonsymbiotic group
(AHb1), whereas both of the rice Hbs analyzed so far appear to
belong to the nonsymbiotic groups of proteins (Fig. 1).
 |
NONSYMBIOTIC Hbs ARE EXPRESSED IN DIVERSE PLANT TISSUES |
Expression of nonsymbiotic Hbs in plant tissues appears to vary
significantly, with the highest levels observed in metabolically active
or stressed tissues. Bogusz et al. (1990)
found that P. andersonii and T. tomentosa hb gene promoters direct
GUS expression in root meristems and in the vascular cylinder of
transgenic tobacco, and in root nodules and vascular tissues of mature
roots of Lotus corniculatus. Similarly, when the promoter
for the nonsymbiotic C. glauca hb gene was fused to a
reporter gene encoding GUS and transformed into L. corniculatus, this promoter directed low levels of GUS expression
in noninfected nodule tissues, but nothing was detected in infected
cells (Jacobsen-Lyon et al., 1995
). Additionally, GUS activity was
detected in meristematic regions of root tips, in parenchyma
internal to the endodermis, and in the vascular stele of roots.
Using northern analysis, Andersson et al. (1996)
detected Hb
transcripts in different parts of soybean plants, with stems exhibiting
the highest transcript levels. In Arabidopsis the symbiotic-like ahb2 gene was expressed at low levels in rosette leaves and
was induced by low temperatures, whereas the nonsymbiotic
ahb1 gene was expressed in roots and rosette leaves and
levels of expression increased under hypoxic conditions, suggesting
that AHb1 is a stress-related protein (Trevaskis et al., 1997
), as has
been well documented for barley Hb (Taylor et al., 1994
; Hill, 1998
).
There is also some evidence that a signal transduction pathway
involving calcium-dependent protein kinase(s) and protein
phosphatase(s) may be involved in barley hb gene expression
(R.D. Hill, personal communication). Results with rice plants grown
under normal conditions (Arredondo-Peter et al., 1997a
) showed that
hb1 and hb2 genes were expressed in leaves, but
only hb1 was expressed in roots, suggesting that rice
hb genes are regulated by different promoters.
 |
POTENTIAL FUNCTIONS OF NONSYMBIOTIC PLANT Hbs: MULTIPLE ROLES
IN DIFFERENT TISSUES? |
Based on the predicted oxygen-binding kinetics and probable
concentration of the nonsymbiotic Hb (approximately 100 nM), Appleby et al. (1988)
were the first to suggest that
one role of the nonsymbiotic Hbs could be to sense oxygen levels. They
suggested that under normal conditions Hb would be oxygenated and under
oxygen-limiting conditions deoxyHb would increase, triggering an
anaerobic response. Andersson et al. (1996)
questioned the
oxygen-sensor hypothesis, suggesting instead that Hbs might function as
oxygen carriers in metabolically active tissues such as soybean stems,
which contain high levels of Hb transcripts. No corresponding data on
the levels of Hb proteins or on the affinity of the soybean Hb protein
for gaseous ligands were presented, largely due to problems associated with purifying the very small amounts of nonsymbiotic Hbs present in
most higher plant tissues.
Such limitations in obtaining purified native protein have been
successfully overcome by producing large amounts of recombinant Hbs in
Escherichia coli. Recombinantly produced Hbs are
indistinguishable from their native counterparts (Arredondo-Peter et
al., 1997b
; Duff et al., 1997
; Hargrove et al., 1997
) and have
permitted detailed studies on the biochemical and biophysical
properties of plant Hbs. This allows the study of protein
structure-function relationships and the use of recombinant proteins to
obtain antibodies that cross-react with the native Hbs in plant
extracts (Duff et al., 1998
).
Analyses of native and recombinant nonsymbiotic Hbs have shown that
these proteins have characteristics that are unique to Hbs capable of
reversible oxygen binding. Spectral characterization of the deoxyheme
pockets of all of the nonsymbiotic Hbs show that this form of the
protein is hexacoordinate. Arredondo-Peter et al. (1997a)
used
site-directed mutagenesis to show that the side chain of the His
residue with homology to the distal His (E7) of vertebrate Hbs is the
coordinating ligand. In spite of this, nonsymbiotic Hbs bind oxygen
rapidly and with very high affinity (Table
I). Furthermore, it is evident from
mutagenesis work that the same His side chain is involved in
stabilizing bound oxygen in the oxygenated form of the protein.
Therefore, in the presence of oxygen, this His side chain rapidly
dissociates from the ligand-binding site and moves into a position from
which it can positively interact with bound oxygen. Thus, a striking
feature of many of the nonsymbiotic Hbs is the unusually high affinity
for oxygen brought about by a moderate association constant that is
coupled to an extremely low dissociation constant (see Table I;
Arredondo-Peter et al., 1997a
; Duff et al., 1997
; Trevaskis et al.,
1997
; Hill, 1998
).
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|
Table I.
Rate (k ) and equilibrium constants (K) for
the reaction of oxygen and CO for some representative plant hemoglobins
|
|
These data do not support either the oxygen-sensor or the
oxygen-transport hypothesis as functions for the nonsymbiotic Hbs. However, we do not discount the possibility of nonsymbiotic Hbs participating as sensors or oxygen carriers under specific conditions. Clearly, more information regarding their cellular interactions with
other proteins and potential ligands is needed to verify these
hypotheses. Nevertheless, nonsymbiotic plant Hbs possess the highest
reported oxygen affinities (Table I), generating intriguing questions
about their function(s) in plant tissues.
Data accumulated from studies with barley Hb, either in barley
cells (for review, see Hill, 1998
) or expressed in suspension cultures
of maize cells (Sowa et al., 1998
), suggest that barley Hb is involved
in some aspect of ATP metabolism in stressed tissues. Antisense
constructs of barley Hb expressed in maize suspension-cultured cells
have much lower levels of ATP and total adenylates under hypoxic
conditions compared with either control cell lines or lines engineered
to overproduce Hb. This has been interpreted as indicating a direct
involvement of Hb in maintaining cellular energy status under
oxygen-limiting conditions (Sowa et al., 1998
). Hill (1998)
has also
suggested that barley Hb might function as an "oxygenase" when
associated with other proteins (see below), and may even participate
directly in the oxidation of pyruvate to maintain a proper cellular
redox state under anoxic/hypoxic conditions.
Using a different approach, Holmberg et al. (1997)
generated transgenic
tobacco expressing a bacterial (Vitreoscilla) Hb. Plants
containing viable Hb protein, as estimated by western blots, showed
enhanced dry matter and chlorophyll and faster germination and
flowering times than the wild-type control plants. Transgenic plants
also contained higher levels of nicotine and greatly lowered levels of
anabasine. These results suggested that plants expressing bacterial Hb
experienced a higher cellular oxygenation, leading to the observed
effects (Holmberg et al., 1997
). However, data on the oxygenation
conditions of Hb or of the cells in situ were not provided to support
this suggestion. A complicating factor is that Vitreoscilla
Hb possesses a much lower oxygen affinity compared with nonsymbiotic
plant Hbs, making it difficult to extrapolate the results observed with
transgenic tobacco to any direct predictions about the role(s) of
nonsymbiotic Hbs in plants. Another problem in assigning roles for
nonsymbiotic Hbs in plants arises from the differences in their
biochemical properties and tissue-expression patterns under ambient
conditions in plants such as Arabidopsis, rice, and soybeans. All of
these data would suggest that nonsymbiotic Hbs could have several
functions in situ.
In the last few years functions other than oxygen transport have been
suggested for Hbs from diverse sources. Animal Hbs are known to possess
a wide range of functions: (a) heat transduction through the
oxygenation/deoxygenation cycle; (b) modulating erythrocyte metabolism;
(c) binding to ion channel proteins; (d) as a source of physiologically
active catabolites (for review, see Giardina et al., 1995
); and (e) as
multifunctional proteins, such as the perienteric Hb from
Ascaris, a parasitic nematode, which is probably involved in
some initial steps of the sterol synthesis (Goldberg, 1995
, and refs.
therein). Moreover, there is indirect evidence that the Hb in the
bacterium Vitreoscilla may function as an oxygen sensor
(Joshi and Dikshit, 1994
) or as a terminal oxidase (Dikshit et al.,
1992
). Sequence comparisons indicate that Vitreoscilla Hb is
more homologous to plant than to animal Hbs (Arredondo-Peter and
Escamilla, 1991
), suggesting that early plant Hbs could have had
functions similar to Vitreoscilla Hb. For example,
overproduction of Vitreoscilla Hb in E. coli
enhances cell growth by changing flux patterns to the pentose
phosphate, TCA, NADH, and ATP pathways, prolonging cell growth during
oxygen-limited conditions (Tsai et al., 1996
).
It is therefore quite possible that nonsymbiotic plant Hbs could
be involved in several metabolic pathways (Fig.
2). For example, route 1 shows possible
interactions when nonsymbiotic Hbs bind to small molecules known to be
ligands, e.g. oxygen, CO, and NO. Binding could be influenced through
interactions with other cellular molecules that could modify the
association or dissociation constants for ligand binding, consequently
altering their function as oxygen carriers or oxygen sensors;
conversely, such interactions might yield molecules with different
activity (e.g. inhibitor/activator-enzyme complexes). Route 2 of Figure
2 shows that Hbs may bind small organic molecules and then function by
transporting fatty acids or, under anaerobic conditions, by
participating in the synthesis of organic compounds.

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| Figure 2.
Possible routes of interactions of nonsymbiotic Hb
in plant cells. See text for further discussion.
|
|
Finally, route 3 of Figure 2 indicates that nonsymbiotic Hbs could
function as oxygen scavengers, based on their extremely tight binding
of oxygen (see Table I). This function might have allowed primitive
anaerobic microorganisms to adapt to increasing levels of oxygen as a
result of photosynthesis. Additionally, ancestral Hbs might have
possessed electron-transport functions. For instance, several bacterial
and yeast Hbs are two-domain proteins that contain a globin and a
flavin domain (flavoHbs; Zhu and Riggs, 1992
; Membrillo-Hernandez and
Poole, 1997
), which apparently function by transporting electrons
(Bolognesi et al., 1997
). During evolution the gene coding for flavoHbs
could have split and generated a one-domain,
Vitreoscilla-like Hb, which was the ancestor of plant and
animal Hbs. Numerous flavoproteins that reduce bacterial and plant Hbs
have been reported (e.g. Jakob et al., 1992
; Ji et al., 1994
, and refs.
therein); therefore, if the gene coding for the flavin domain still
exists in plants, the resulting flavoprotein may interact with
nonsymbiotic Hbs to function in electron-transfer reactions. It is also
possible that mutants of only one of these primitive Hbs was selected
within a particular plant family during the evolution of a
symbiosis. If this were true, one would expect multiple hbs
to have evolved with multiple biochemical and physiological functions.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author; e-mail rklucas{at}unlinfo.unl.edu; fax
402-472-7842.
Received June 22, 1998;
accepted July 13, 1998.
1
This work was supported in part by the National
Science Foundation (grant no. OSR-92552255), by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension
Service (grant no. 95-37305-2441), and by the Center for Biotechnology,
University of Nebraska, Lincoln, which was funded through the Nebraska
Research Initiative. R.A.P. was supported by Consejo Nacional de
Ciencia y Tecnologia México (project no. 25229-N). J.F.M. was the
recipient of a postdoctoral fellowship from the Ministerio de
Educación y Cultura, Spain. This is journal series no. 12,276 of
the Agricultural Research Division, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
Abbreviations:
Hb, hemoglobin.
Lb, leghemoglobin.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
We thank Dr. Robert D. Hill for sharing preprints and
unpublished information.
 |
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