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1.
The effects of pH upon infrared spectra [CO stretching frequency (vco) region] and visible spectra of the CO complexes of soybean leghemoglobins a, c1, and c2, sperm whale myoglobin, and human hemoglobin A are reported. The vco for leghemoglobin--CO complexes was 1947.5 cm-1 at neutral pH. At acid pH myoglobin-- and hemoglobin--CO complexes developed vco bands at 1966--1968 cm-1, whereas leghemoglobin--CO complexes developed vco bands at approximately 1957 cm-1. All pKapp co values determined by pH-dependent variation of vco fell in the range 4.0--4.6. The pKapp co values determined from visible spectra were consistent with vco-determined values except for that of myoglobin--CO (visible pKapp co = 5.8). The pKapp co values in the 4.0--4.6 range appear to be pK values of the distal histidines, while the visible pKapp co of myoglobin--CO appears to be the pK of a group other than the distal and proximal histidines. The data are consistent with a model in which protonation of the distal histidine permits protein-free heme FeCO geometry in leghemoglobin--CO complexes but not in myoglobin-- or hemoglobin--CO complexes. Thus the heme pockets of leghemoglobins appear to be more flexible than the heme pockets of myoglobin and hemoglobin. The effects of pH upon visible spectra of the O2 complexes of soybean leghemoglobins a, c1, and c2, sperm whale myoglobin, and human hemoglobin A also are reported. pKapp o2 values of approximately 5.5 (leghemoglobins) and 4.4 (hemoglobin) are probably the pK values of the distal histidines. Comparisons of pKapp o2 values with pKapp co values indicate a more flexible heme pocket in leghemoglobins than in hemoglobin. The O2 complex of leghemoglobin c2 differed significantly from the O2 complexes of leghemoglobins a and c1 in visible spectra and titration behavior. These differences might be associated with the small structural differences in the region between the E and F helixes of leghemoglobins.  相似文献   

2.
The hemoproteins (sperm whale myoglobin, hemoglobin from larvae of Chironomus thummi thummi, bovine hemoglobin) were studied in viscous solvents (saturated sucrose solution, glycerol and water-glycerol solutions) in the temperature range +50 divided by -100 degrees C. At low temperatures the three-phase kinetics of Mb recombination with CO was observed. The velocities of two "fast" reactions did not depend on ligand concentration. This fact indicates that they are due to a so called cage-effect. The formation of the cage is caused apparently by a local change of the solvent state in the heme region. To explain the biphasic "cage" kinetics it has been assumed that during some time after photodissociation myoglobin remains in the "ligand-bound" conformation and reacts with CO faster than the "normal" myoglobin. For other hemoproteins the "cage-effect" was not observed. For all the studied hemoproteins the quantum yield of photodissociation decreased as the temperature decreased. The decrease of quantum yield can be described by the Arrenius law. The rates of the decrease of quantum yield differ for different proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The evolutionary relation of vertebrate myoglobin and the hemoglobin chains including the agnathan hemoglobin chain is investigated on the basis of a new view of amino acid changes that is developed by canonical discriminant analysis of amino acid residues at individual sites. In contrast to the clear discrimination of amino acid residues between myoglobin, hemoglobin a chain, and hemoglobin chain in warm-blood vertebrates, the three types of globins in the lower class of vertebrates show so much variation that they are not well discriminated. This is seen particularly at the sites that are ascertained in mammals to carry the amino acid residues participating in stabilizing the monomeric structure in myoglobin and the residues forming the subunit contacts in hemoglobin. At these sites, agnathan hemoglobin chains are evaluated to be intermediate between the myoglobin and hemoglobin chains of gnathostomes. The variation in the phylogenetically lower class of globins is also seen in the internal region; there the amino acid residues of myoglobin and hemoglobin chains in the phylogenetically higher class exhibit an example of parallel evolution at the molecular level. New quantities, the distance of sequence property between discriminated groups and the variation within each group, are derived from the values of discriminant functions along the peptide chain, and this set of quantities simply describes an overall feature of globins such that the distinction between the three types of globins has been clearer as the vertebrates have evolved to become jawed, landed, and warm-blooded. This result strongly suggests that the functional constraint on the amino acid sequence of a protein is changed by living conditions and that severe conditions constitute a driving force that creates a distinctive protein from a less-constrained protein.Offprint requests to: J. Otsuka  相似文献   

4.
Herold S  Shivashankar K 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):14036-14046
Hemoproteins, in particular, myoglobin and hemoglobin, are among the major targets of peroxynitrite in vivo. The oxygenated forms of these proteins are oxidized by peroxynitrite to their corresponding iron(iii) forms (metMb and metHb). This reaction has previously been shown to proceed via the corresponding oxoiron(iv) forms of the proteins. In this paper, we have conclusively shown that metMb and metHb catalyze the isomerization of peroxynitrite to nitrate. The catalytic rate constants were determined by stopped-flow spectroscopy in the presence and absence of 1.2 mM CO(2) at 20 and 37 degrees C. The values obtained for metMb and metHb, with no added CO(2) at pH 7.0 and 20 degrees C, are (7.7 +/- 0.1) x 10(4) and (3.9 +/- 0.2) x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. The pH-dependence of the catalytic rate constants indicates that HOONO is the species that reacts with the iron(iii) center of the proteins. In the presence of 1.2 mM CO(2), metMb and metHb also accelerate the decay of peroxynitrite in a concentration-dependent way. However, experiments carried out at pH 8.3 in the presence of 10 mM CO(2) suggest that ONOOCO(2)(-), the species generated from the reaction of ONOO(-) with CO(2), does not react with the iron(iii) center of Mb and Hb. Finally, we showed that different forms of Mb and Hb protect free tyrosine from peroxynitrite-mediated nitration. The order of efficiency is metMbCN < apoMb < metHb < metMb < ferrylMb < oxyHb < deoxyHb < oxyMb. Taken together, our data show that myoglobin is always a better scavenger than hemoglobin. Moreover, the globin offers very little protection, as the heme-free (apoMb) and heme-blocked (metMbCN) forms only partly prevent nitration of free tyrosine.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of high pressure (0.1-3.4 gigapascal (GPa)) on the ferrous heme active sites of human adult hemoglobin, sperm whale myoglobin, and Glycera dibranchiata hemoglobin (Fraction II) were probed using resonance Raman and absorption spectroscopies. High-to-low spin transitions of the heme iron occur for hemoglobin, myoglobin, and Glycera hemoglobin at 0.35, 0.75, and 0.50 GPa, respectively, for the deoxy species. These interspecies differences result from variations in the composition of the hemepockets and/or their rigidity to pressure-induced volume changes. Heme active sites initially bound to CO or O2 exhibit distinctive behavior at high pressures. For all proteins studied, O2 apparently dissociates from the heme at only moderately high pressure, while CO remains bound to the heme moiety even at extreme pressures. The Raman spectra demonstrate the differences in the ligated and deoxy species at 3.4 GPa in the high frequency region. Discrete changes (i.e. iron spin-state transitions and dissociation of O2) occur that are commensurate with the collapse of the distal pocket, while continuous shifts in the absorption and Raman spectra are observed at pressures above those required for pocket collapse.  相似文献   

6.
Pulmonary diffusing capacities (DL) of NO and CO were determined simultaneously from rebreathing equilibration kinetics in anesthetized paralyzed supine dogs (mean body wt 20 kg) after denitrogenation (replacement of N2 by Ar). During rebreathing the dogs were ventilated in closed circuit with a gas mixture containing 0.06% NO, 0.06% 13C18O, and 1% He in Ar for 15 s, with tidal volume of 0.5 liter and frequency of 60/min. The partial pressures of NO, 13C18O, 16O18O, N2, Ar, CO2, and He in the trachea were continuously analyzed by mass spectrometry. Measurements were performed at various O2 levels characterized by the mean end-expired PO2 during rebreathing (PE'O2). In control conditions ("normoxia," PE'O2 = 67 +/- 8 Torr) the following mean +/- SD values were obtained (in ml.min-1.Torr-1): DLNO = 52.4 +/- 11.0 and DLCO = 15.4 +/- 2.9. In hypoxia (PE'O2 = 24 +/- 7 Torr) DLNO increased by 11 +/- 8% and DLCO by 19 +/- 10%, and in hyperoxia (PE'O2 = 390 +/- 26 Torr) DLNO decreased to 87 +/- 3% and DLCO to 56 +/- 8% with respect to values in normoxia. DLNO/DLCO of 3.24 +/- 0.06 (hypoxia), 3.38 +/- 0.31 (normoxia), and 5.54 +/- 1.04 (hyperoxia) were significantly higher than the NO/CO Krogh diffusion constant ratio (1.92) predicted for simple diffusion through aqueous layers. With increasing O2 uptake elicited by 2,4-dinitrophenol, DLNO and DLCO increased and DLNO/DLCO remained close to unchanged. The results suggest that the combined effects of diffusion and chemical reaction with hemoglobin limit alveolar-capillary transport of CO. If it is assumed that reaction kinetics of NO with hemoglobin (known to be extremely fast) are not rate limiting for NO uptake, the contribution of the slow chemical reaction with hemoglobin to the total CO uptake resistance (= 1/DLCO) was estimated to be 38% in hypoxia, 41% in normoxia, and 64% in hyperoxia. The various factors expected to restrict the validity of this analysis are discussed, in particular the effects of functional inhomogeneity.  相似文献   

7.
The heat of reaction of CO gas with the alpha2Mmetbeta2 and alpha2Mbeta2 species of the alpha-chain mutant hemoglobin M Iwate has been studied in buffers with different heats of ionization of 25degrees and in the absence of organic phosphates. For the alpha2Mmetbeta2deoxy species we find a small Bohr effect (0.12 mol of H+/mol of CO) which is in correspondence with that found in equilibrium studies. The heat of reaction, when corrected for proton reaction with buffer, is -18.4 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol of CO at pH 7.4 At pH 9 the same value is observed within experimental error. This value compares closely with heats of reaction of CO with myoglobin and with van't Hoff determinations of the heat of oxygen binding to isolated hemoglobin alpha and beta chains after correction for the heat of replacement of O2 by CO. Furthermore, an analysis of the differential heat of ligand binding as a function of the extent of reaction indicated that, within experimental error, the heat of reaction with the first beta-chain heme in alpha2Mmetbeta2deoxy is the same as the second. Since the quaternary Tleads to R transition is blocked in this mutant hemoglobin, we compared it with Hb A to estimate the enthalpic component of the allosteric T leads to R transition in Hb A. The heats of reaction with CO(g) and Hb A are -15.7 +/- 0.5 and -20.9 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol at pH 7.4 and 9.0, respectively. In going from the T to the R state we find an enthalpy of transition of 9 +/- 2.5 kcal at pH 7.4 and -12 +/- 2.5 kcal at pH 9.0. From published free energies of transsition we conclude the T leads to R transition is enthalpically controlled at p/ 7.4 but entropically controlled at pH 9.0 A near normal Bohr effect is estimated from heats of reaction of CO with alpha2Mdeoxybeta2deoxy in various buffers. A large than normal heat of reaction (-21.6 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol of CO) is attributed to the abnormal alpha chains in Hb M Iwate.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of the reactions of myoglobin and hemoglobin with *OH and CO3*- in the presence of oxygen was studied using pulse and gamma-radiolysis. Unlike *NO2, which adds to the porphyrin iron, *OH and CO3*- form globin radicals. These secondary radicals oxidize the Fe(II) center through both intra- and intermolecular processes. The intermolecular pathway was further demonstrated when BSA radicals derived from *OH or CO3*- oxidized oxyhemoglobin and oxymyoglobin to their respective ferric states. The oxidation yields obtained by pulse radiolysis were lower compared to gamma-radiolysis, where the contribution of radical-radical reactions is negligible. Full oxidation yields by *OH-derived globin radicals could be achieved only at relatively high concentrations of the heme protein mainly via an intermolecular pathway. It is suggested that CO3*- reaction with the protein yields Tyr and/or Trp-derived phenoxyl radicals, which solely oxidize the porphyrin iron under gamma-radiolysis conditions. The *OH particularly adds to aromatic residues, which can undergo elimination of H2O forming the phenoxyl radical, and/or react rapidly with O2 yielding peroxyl radicals. The peroxyl radical can oxidize a neighboring porphyrin iron and/or give rise to superoxide, which neither oxidize nor reduce the porphyrin iron. The potential physiological implications of this chemistry are that hemoglobin and myoglobin, being present at relatively high concentrations, can detoxify highly oxidizing radicals yielding the respective ferric states, which are not toxic.  相似文献   

9.
C H Barlow  P I Ohlsson  K G Paul 《Biochemistry》1976,15(10):2225-2229
Infrared difference spectra, FeIIICO vs. FeIII of horseradish peroxidase isoenzymes A2 and C were recorded from 2000 to 1800 cm-1. Under alkaline conditions, pH 9, both isoenzymes exhibit two CO stretching bands, at 1938 and 1925 cm-1 for A2 and at 1933 and 1929 cm-1 for C. As the pH is lowered the low-frequency band for each isoenzyme decreases in intensity with a concommitant appearance and increase in intensity of a band at 1906 and 1905 cm-1 for the A2 and C isoenzymes, respectively. These changes conform to pK values of 6.7 for the A2 and 8.8 for the C isoenzymes of horseradish peroxidase. The interpretation of the infrared results was simplified by the observation that a linear relationship exists between the redox potential, Em7, for the FeIII/FeII system vs. the infrared CO stretching frequency, vCO, for cytochrome a3, hemoglobin, myoglobin, and cytochrome P-450 cam with substrate. This relationship suggests that the primary force altering vCO in these heme proteins is a variation in electron density at the heme iron and not direct protein interactions with the CO ligand. The horseradish peroxidase infrared bands in the 1930-cm-1 region correlate well with this relationship. The large deviation of the 1905-cm-1 band from the linear relationship and its dependence upon hydrogen ion concentration are consistent with horseradish peroxidase having a single CO binding site which can hold in two geometries, one of which contains an amino acid moiety capable of forming a hydrogen bond to the carbonyl oxygen.  相似文献   

10.
Functional and structural studies on hemoglobin and myoglobin from different animals and engineered variants have enlightened the great importance of the physico-chemical properties of the side-chains at topological position B10 and E7. These residues proved to be crucial to the discrimination and stabilisation of gaseous ligands. In view of the data obtained on the high oxygen affinity hemoglobin from Ascaris worms and a new mutant of sperm whale myoglobin, we selected the two mutations Leu B10-->Tyr and His E7-->Gln as potentially relevant to control ligand binding parameters in the alpha and beta-chains of human hemoglobin. Here, we present an investigation of three new mutants: HbalphaYQ (alpha2YQbeta2A), HbbetaYQ (alpha2Abeta2YQ) and HbalphabetaYQ (alpha2YQbeta2YQ). They are characterised by a very low reactivity for NO, O2 and CO, and a reduced cooperativity. Their functional properties are not inconsistent with the behaviour expected for a two-state allosteric model. Proteins with these substitutions may be considered as candidates for the synthesis of a possible "blood substitute", which should yield an O2 adduct stable to autoxidation and slowly reacting with NO. The mutant HbalphabetaYQ is particularly interesting because the rate of reaction of NO with the oxy and deoxy derivatives is reduced. A structural interpretation of our data is presented based on the 3D structure of deoxy HbalphabetaYQ determined by crystallography at 1.8 A resolution.  相似文献   

11.
We report an unusually high frequency (543 cm(-)(1)) for an Fe-CO stretching mode in the CO complex of Ascaris suum hemoglobin as compared to vertebrate hemoglobins in which the frequency of the Fe-CO mode is much lower. A second Fe-CO stretching mode in Ascaris hemoglobin is observed at 515 cm(-1). We propose that these two Fe-CO stretching modes arise from two protein conformers corresponding to interactions of the heme-bound CO with the B10-tyrosine or the E7-glutamine residues. This postulate is supported by spectra from the B10-Tyr --> Phe mutant in which the 543 cm(-1) line is absent. Thus, a strong polar interaction, such as hydrogen bonding, of the CO with the distal B10 tyrosine residue is the dominant factor that causes this anomalously high frequency. Strong hydrogen bonding between O(2) and distal residues in the oxy complex of Ascaris hemoglobin has been shown to result in a rigid structure, rendering an extremely low oxygen off rate [Gibson, Q. H., and Smith, M. H. (1965) Proc. R. Soc. London B 163, 206-214]. In contrast, the CO off rate in Ascaris hemoglobin is very similar to that in sperm whale myoglobin. The high CO off rate relative to that of O(2) in Ascaris hemoglobin is attributed to a rapid equilibrium between the two conformations of the protein in the CO adduct, with the off rate being determined by the conformer with the higher rate.  相似文献   

12.
57Fe-enriched complexes of hemoglobin and myoglobin with CO and O2 were photodissociated at 4.2 degrees K, and the resulting spectra were compared with those of the deoxy forms. Differences in both quadrupole splitting and isomer shift were noted for each protein, the photoproducts having smaller isomer shift and larger quadrupole splitting than the deoxy forms. The photoproducts of HbCO and HbO2 had narrow absorption lines, indicating a well-defined iron environment. The corresponding myoglobin species had broader absorption lines, as did both deoxy forms. The weak absorption lines of photodissociated NO complexes appeared to be wide, possibly indicating magnetic interaction with the unpaired electron of the nearby NO.  相似文献   

13.
Dynamics of ligand binding to heme proteins   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
  相似文献   

14.
To examine the adaptations to low O2 and high CO2 among fossorial and nonfossorial rodents, hematological parameters were determined for laboratory rats, the valley pocket gopher (Thomomys bottae) from 250 m, and the mountain pocket gopher (T. umbrinus melanotis) from 3150 m. Hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration, and O2 capacity were higher in pocket gophers than in rats. Blood PO2 at 50% saturation and pH 7.4 was 33 mmHg for both gophers and 39 mmHg for rats. Bohr factors for all three rodents were similar (-0.55 to -0.61) but buffer value, delta log PCO2/delta pH, was -2.54 for T. umbrinus, -1.97 for T. bottae, and -0.98 for Rattus. Concentrations of total acid-soluble phosphates were 50-75% higher in gophers than in rats, while bicarbonate values were within the normal mammalian range. All three rodents had similar myoglobin concentrations in cardiac muscle. Myoglobin concentrations were significantly higher in skeletal muscles (diaphragm, gastrocnemius) of T. umbrinus when compared to T. bottae, and significantly higher in both gophers when compared to rats. These differences may constitute important adaptations to the hypoxia and hypercapnia in burrows; certain of these factors in pocket gophers respond to the additional stress of high altitude hypoxia.  相似文献   

15.
A molecular model of hemoglobin was constructed which made it possible to visualize the relation between various amino acid residues in the molecule. The model indicates that electrostatic forces might play a significant role in holding the subunits of hemoglobin together. This would explain why myoglobin does not form a tetramer while four β-chains, which are structurally similar to myoglobin, do assemble into a hemoglobin H molecule. Also, as far as the primary structures of hemoglobin chains of various species are known, the proposed ionic links between subunits are consistent with the fact that mammalian hemoglobins form stable tetramers while the peptide chains of lamprey hemoglobin are only weakly associated. The different behavior of hemoglobin H and of normal hemoglobin upon oxygen uptake is briefly discussed in terms of allosteric effects.  相似文献   

16.
R W Romberg  R J Kassner 《Biochemistry》1979,18(24):5387-5392
The Soret absorption maxima and extinction coefficients of the CO and NO complexes of horse myoglobin and (NMeIm)protoheme (NMeIm = 1-methylimidazole) have been determined. The partition coefficient N, equal to the ratio P1/2 (CO)/P1/2(NO), has been determined spectrophotometrically for horse myoglobin and (NMeIm)protoheme. P1/2-(NO) values calculated from the partition coefficients are 5.7 x 10(7) mmHg for (NMeIm)protheme and 1.1 x 10(6) mmHg for horse myoglobin. The ratio of P1/2(NO) values for protein and model is 1.9 which is similar to a value of 1.6 reported for the ratio of P1/2(O2) values. These values may be compared to a ratio of 15 for CO binding to protein and model complexes. This different ratio for CO provides further evidence for steric interaction of the bound CO with the protein based on a consideration of the preferred nonlinear geometry of Fe-NO and Fe-O2 and the linear geometry of Fe-CO.  相似文献   

17.
The pH dependence of infrared and NMR spectroscopic parameters for carbon monoxide bound to human, equine, rabbit and Glycera dibranchiata monomer fraction hemoglobins has been examined. In all cases, the vertebrate hemoglobins exhibit CO vibrations and 13CO chemical shifts which are pH dependent, whereas the invertebrate hemoglobin does not. The Glycera dibranchiata monomer fraction exhibits the highest wavenumber CO vibration (1970 cm-1) and the most shielded chemical shift (206.2 ppm). The pH behavior of the vertebrate CO-hemoglobins is that the heme-coordinated carbon monoxide chemical shifts and principal infrared vibrations tend toward the values observed for the G. dibranchiata CO-hemoglobin fraction. These results are interpreted as originating in protonation of the distal histidine (E-7) in the vertebrate hemoglobins. The anomalous values for Glycera dibranchiata are concluded to be due to the absence of a distal histidine (E-7 His----Leu) in the heme pocket and not to gross structural dissimilarities between the proteins of the different species examined. Primary sequence similarity matrices have been constructed to compare the functional classes of amino acids at homologous positions for the CD and E helices and for the primary heme contacts in human, equine, sperm whale myoglobin, and the Glycera dibranchiata monomer hemoglobin to illustrate this point. They reveal a high correspondence for all globins and do not correlate with the spectroscopic parameters of heme-coordinated CO.  相似文献   

18.
The vibrational energy relaxation of dissociated carbon monoxide in the heme pocket of sperm whale myoglobin has been studied using equilibrium molecular dynamics simulation and normal mode analysis methods. Molecular dynamics trajectories of solvated myoglobin were run at 300 K for both the delta- and epsilon-tautomers of the distal histidine, His64. Vibrational population relaxation times were estimated using the Landau-Teller model. For carbon monoxide (CO) in the myoglobin epsilon-tautomer, for a frequency of omega0 = 2131 cm-1 corresponding to the B1 state, T1epsilon(B1) = 640 +/- 185 ps, and for a frequency of omega0 = 2119 cm-1 corresponding to the B2 state, T1epsilon(B2) = 590 +/- 175 ps. Although the CO relaxation rates in both the epsilon- and delta-tautomers are similar in magnitude, the simulations predict that the vibrational relaxation of the CO is faster in the delta-tautomer. For CO in the myoglobin delta-tautomer, it was found that the relaxation times were identical within error for the two CO substate frequencies, T1delta(B1) = 335 +/- 115 ps and T1delta(B2) = 330 +/- 145 ps. These simulation results are in reasonable agreement with experimental results of Anfinrud and coworkers (unpublished results). Normal mode calculations were used to identify the dominant coupling between the protein and CO molecules. The calculations suggest that the residues of the myoglobin pocket, acting as a first solvation shell to the CO molecule, contribute the primary "doorway" modes in the vibrational relaxation of the oscillator.  相似文献   

19.
A dichroic microspectrophotometer was used to measure isotropic and dichroic absorbance spectra of this unique cytoplasmic hemoglobin and its derivatives. A perfusion slide enabled changing the media bathing the Mermis head. The native spectrum, which has an exceptionally low alpha-band extinction, was shown to be entirely due to oxyhemoglobin. The CO-hemoglobin spectrum is more typical, however, the alpha- and beta-bands are unusually closely spaced. A ferric hemochrome was formed on oxidation with ferricyanide or hydroxylamine and was readily converted to ferric hemoglobin cyanide on adding cyanide. Aquoferric hemoglobin and ferric hemoglobin fluoride were not easily formed. Deoxyhemoglobin, identified by its typical absorption spectrum, was formed only under the extremely low O2 pressures attainable in the presence of dithionite. A glucose oxidase, catalase solution deoxygenated hemoglobin in human erythrocytes but not in adjacent Mermis preparations. The affinity for O2 is much greater than for CO. Also, spectral evidence points to an oxyheme environment that is different than in vertebrate hemoglobin and myoglobin. The polarization ratio (PR) magnitude and the PR spectrum were unaffected by perfusion with high refractive index solvents; therefore, form dichroism due to the rodlike crystals is negligible. Maximum extinction is approximately perpendicular to the long axis of the microscopic crystals, which are oriented parallel to the body axis within the hypodermal cells. The PR spectra of the hemoglobin derivatives strongly resemble the corresponding spectra previously reported of single crystals made of horse hemoglobin, whale myoglobin, or Aplysia myoglobin and change appropriately when the ligand is changed. This confirms that the intracellular crystals of Mermis are of oxyhemoglobin.  相似文献   

20.
A thin-layer gas-solution microcalorimeter has been developed to study the binding reactions of gaseous ligands with ligand binding macromolecules. We have measured the enthalpy of binding oxygen and carbon monoxide to horse myoglobin, human hemoglobin A0 and sperm whale myoglobin in phosphate buffer at pH 7.6, with the enzyme reducing system of Hayashi. Reactions of human hemoglobin were also done under various buffer conditions in order to elucidate the Bohr effect. These binding reactions were found not to exhibit a detectable enthalpy change over the temperature range of 10 degrees C to 25 degrees C. The enzyme reducing system was shown to react with oxygen in a manner that releases a substantial amount of heat. This problem was corrected by using a minimum amount and by placing the buffer and enzyme system in the reference cell effectively cancelling the oxygen enzyme reaction heat as well as the heat of gas dissolution. It was also demonstrated that glucose-6-phosphate, one of the reducing system components, in 50 mM concentrations can influence the heat of binding oxygen and carbon monoxide to hemoglobin. This effect was shown to be absent in the myoglobins and also with hemoglobin at glucose-6-phosphate concentrations less than 5 mM.  相似文献   

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