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1.
The functional properties of squirrel-fish hemoglobin have been measured by studying ligand binding equilibria and kinetics. The results show that squirrel-fish hemoglobin has a Root effect with a corresponding stabilization of the low affinity state. The properties of this state are pH dependent even in the absence of cooperativity. The effect of ATP shifts the overall ligant affinity towards the low affinity state and is characteristic of the allosteric effect caused by organic phosphates. Under pH and ATP conditions favoring the low affinity conformational state, a 10-fold difference in the binding kinetics of carbon monoxide to the alpha and beta subunits is observed.  相似文献   

2.
Isolated alpha and beta chains from Xenopus laevis hemoglobin have been purified. The isolation procedure yields native alpha chains whose functional behavior has been characterized and compared with that of human alpha chains. Isolated beta chains in the presence of oxygen are characterized by low stability, and hence their functional characterization was limited to the CO binding kinetics. When stoichiometric amounts of the isolated alpha and beta chains are mixed, a tetramer characterized by heme-heme interactions and oxygen affinity comparable to that of the native molecule is readily reconstituted. Moreover, both chains, under appropriate conditions, form stable hybrid tetramers with the partner subunits from human hemoglobin; results on the functional properties of these hybrid hemoglobins are presented and discussed in relation to the stereochemical model of the Root effect.  相似文献   

3.
The Gymnothorax unicolor hemoglobin system is characterized by two components, called cathodic and anodic on the basis of their isoelectric point, which were separated by ion-exchange chromatography. The oxygen-binding properties of the purified components were studied in the absence and presence of chloride and/or GTP or ATP in the pH range 6.5-8.0. Stripped cathodic hemoglobin showed a small reverse Bohr effect, high oxygen affinity, and low co-operativity; the addition of chloride only caused a small decrease in oxygen affinity. In the presence of GTP or ATP, the oxygen affinity was dramatically reduced, the co-operativity increased, and the reverse Bohr effect abolished. Stripped anodic hemoglobin is characterized by both low oxygen affinity and co-operativity, and displayed a normal Bohr effect; the addition of chloride increased co-operativity, whereas ATP and GTP significantly modulated oxygen affinity at acidic pH values, enhancing the Bohr effect and giving rise to the Root effect. The complete amino-acid sequences of the alpha and beta chains of both hemoglobins were established; the molecular basis of the functional properties of the hemoglobins is discussed in the light of the primary structure and compared with those of other fish hemoglobins.  相似文献   

4.
It has been established that Molpadia hemoglobin tends to dissociate into subunits as oxygen is bound. The kinetics and equilibria of carbon monoxide and ethylisocyanide binding reported here show a dependence on protein concentration that supports the conclusion that the aggregated hemoglobin has a lower ligand affinity than the dissociated subunits. This is true for the isolated D-chain as well as for the unfractionated hemolysate that contains four distinct polypeptide chains (A-D). This indicates that even homopolymers of Molpadia hemoglobin have lower ligand affinity than the dissociated subunits. At high protein concentration hemolysates of Molpadia hemoglobin show slight cooperativity. The time course of ligand binding to the deoxy D-chain also suggests cooperative interactions. The low affinity of the aggregated state may have a different molecular explanation than in human hemoglobin where tetramers of identical subunits (as in Hb H) show high oxygen affinity. The absence of tyrosine and histidine at the C-terminal of the Molpadia D-chains also suggests a different stabilization of the low affinity deoxy state. An additional functional difference between Molpadia hemoglobin and human hemoglobin is that organic phosphates do not alter the ligand affinity of the sea cucumber hemoglobin.  相似文献   

5.
The structural basis of the extreme pH dependence of oxygen binding to Root effect Hbs is a long-standing puzzle in the field of protein chemistry. A previously unappreciated role of steric factors in the Root effect was revealed by a comparison of pH effects on oxygenation and oxidation processes in human Hb relative to Spot (Leiostomus xanthurus) and Carp (Cyprinodon carpio) Hbs. The Root effect confers five-fold increased pH sensitivity to oxygenation of Spot and Carp Hbs relative to Hb A(0) in the absence of anionic effectors, and even larger relative elevations of pH sensitivity of oxygenation in the presence of 0.2M phosphate. Remarkably, the Root effect was not evident in the oxidation of the Root effect Hbs. This finding rules out pH-dependent alterations in the thermodynamic properties of the heme iron, measured in the anaerobic oxidation reaction, as the basis of the Root effect. The alternative explanation supported by these results is that the elevated pH sensitivity of oxygenation of Root effect Hbs is attributable to globin-dependent steric effects that alter oxygen affinity by constraining conformational fluidity, but which have little influence on electron exchange via the heme edge. This elegant mode of allosteric control can regulate oxygen affinity within a given quaternary state, in addition to modifying the T-R equilibrium. Evolution of Hb sequences that result in proton-linked steric barriers to heme oxygenation could provide a general mechanism to account for the appearance of the Root effect in the structurally diverse Hbs of many species.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of mutagenesis on O(2), CO, and NO binding to mutants of human hemoglobin, designed to modify some features of the reactivity that hinder use of hemoglobin solutions as blood substitute, has been extensively investigated. The kinetics may be interpreted in the framework of the Monod-Wyman-Changeux two-state allosteric model, based on the high-resolution crystallographic structures of the mutants and taking into account the control of heme reactivity by the distal side mutations. The mutations involve residues at topological position B10 and E7, i.e., Leu (B10) to Tyr and His (E7) to Gln, on either the alpha chains alone (yielding the hybrid tetramer Hbalpha(YQ)), the beta chains alone (hybrid tetramer Hbbeta(YQ)), or both types of chains (Hb(YQ)). Our data indicate that the two mutations affect ligand diffusion into the pocket, leading to proteins with low affinity for O(2) and CO, and especially with reduced reactivity toward NO, a difficult goal to achieve. The observed kinetic heterogeneity between the alpha(YQ) and beta(YQ) chains in Hb(YQ) has been rationalized on the basis of the three-dimensional structure of the active site. Furthermore, we report for the first time an experiment of partial CO binding, selective for the beta chains, to high salt crystals of the mutant Hb(YQ) in the T-state; these crystallographic data may be interpreted as "snapshots" of the initial events possibly occurring on ligand binding to the T-allosteric state of this peculiar mutant Hb.  相似文献   

7.
The crystal structure of hemoglobin has been known for several decades, yet various features of the molecule remain unexplained or controversial. Several animal hemoglobins have properties that cannot be readily explained in terms of their amino acid sequence and known atomic models of hemoglobin. Among these, fish hemoglobins are well known for their widely varying interactions with heterotropic effector molecules and pH sensitivity. Some fish hemoglobins are almost completely insensitive to pH (within physiological limits), whereas others show extremely low oxygen affinity under acid conditions, a phenomenon called the Root effect. X-ray crystal structures of Root effect hemoglobins have not, to date, provided convincing explanations of this effect. Sequence alignments have signally failed to pinpoint the residues involved, and site-directed mutagenesis has not yielded a human hemoglobin variant with this property. We have solved the crystal structure of tuna hemoglobin in the deoxy form at low and moderate pH and in the presence of carbon monoxide at high pH. A comparison of these models shows clear evidence for novel mechanisms of pH-dependent control of ligand affinity.  相似文献   

8.
The four components of hemoglobin from the rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) have been isolated. The oxygen affinities of the first two components eluted from the DEAE-cellulose column have much smaller pH dependencies than the last two components. These components have very low O2 affinities at low pH. The effect of pH on the equilibrium and kinetics of ligand binding to the third fraction, the pH-dependent component present in greatest amounts, has been studied. Measurements of ligand binding equilibria demonstrate the presence of both an alkaline and an acid Bohr effect. In the region of the alkaline Bohr effect the value of n in the Hill equation is a function of ligand affinity. For CO binding n decreases as the pH is decreased until at pH 6, the minimum ligand affinity is reached. At this pH there is also a complete loss of cooperative ligand binding. Decreasing the pH further results in an increase of ligand affinity, but this acid Bohr effect is not associated with a reappearance of cooperativity. This suggests that Fraction 3 of S. gairdneri is frozen in the low affinity, deoxygenated conformation at low pH and that the quaternary structure does not change even when fully liganded. However, the properties of the low affinity conformation of this hemoglobin are pH-dependent.  相似文献   

9.
Ligand-binding equilibria, kinetics and (13)C n.m.r. spectra of bound (13)CO, of the haemoglobins from two fishes that are very distant on the evolutionary scale, i.e. the fourth haemoglobin component from Salmo irideus and the single component from Osteoglossum bicirrhosum, were studied. The C-terminal sequence was also determined for the haemoglobin from Osteoglossum. The results show that (i) the C-terminal residues of both chains are not directly responsible for the characteristic heterotropic effect known as Root effect, since for both fish haemoglobins these residues are identical with those of human haemoglobins. (ii) In all haemoglobins characterized by the Root effect a dependence of the (13)CO n.m.r. resonances on pH is observed. However, the extent of the shift(s) depends on the particular protein, and is probably the result of a combination of both tertiary and quaternary conformational changes. (iii) Both haemoglobins from trout and Osteoglossum manifest a functional heterogeneity between the two types of chains in the tetramer, which increases with proton activity. For CO, the effect is very small for trout haemoglobin IV, and very marked for Osteoglossum haemoglobin; for O(2) strongly heterogeneous binding curves were obtained at approx. pH6.2 with both haemoglobins. (iv) Estimations of the relative values of the affinity constants for the alpha and beta chains in the tetramer were obtained for both haemoglobins from (13)CO n.m.r. spectra at low fractional saturation. On the basis of these findings the molecular mechanism underlying the Root effect is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Alkaline Bohr effect of human hemoglobin Ao   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
  相似文献   

11.
Opossum hemoglobin assumes a T quaternary structure upon NO ligation in the absence of organic phophates at pH 6.7. In addition, stripped opossum hemoglobin exhibits a low oxygen affinity when compared to human hemoglobin and a pH-dependent heme-heme interaction with an n value of 2.14 at pH 7.0 and 2.46 at pH 7.35. These observations indicate that opossum hemoglobin may have a destabilized oxy structure when compared to hemoglobin A due to differences in primary structure. Thus, the strong trans ligand effect of nitric oxide is able to disrupt the proximal histidine-iron bond in the alpha-hemes triggering a conformational transition to the T state. Absence of a distal histidine in the alpha-subunits and, therefore an impaired donor acceptor interaction with the sixth ligand, could contribute to the lack of stability of the R quaternary structure in opossum nitrosylhemoglobin. The reduced oxygen affinity of opossum hemoglobin may be compensated for by other physiological factors such as a reduced phosphate effect.  相似文献   

12.
The wide ligand affinity range previously observed for carp hemoglobin is bounded at both extremes by regions of constant affinity. Within these regions, pH, organic phosphates, and the extent of ligand binding have no effect on the measured affinity and the cooperativity of ligand binding is greatly reduced or absent. The rates of CO recombination to fully and partially unliganded carp hemoglobin, under various organic phosphate and pH conditions, are shown to reflect this behavior. Constant kinetic rates are seen to directly correspond to the regions of constant affinity. Therefore, these are taken to be single protein conformations, one of high and one of low ligand affinity. In the simplest view, these conformations represent the R and T states of a two-state model, and most of the properties of carp hemoglobin are explained quite well within this framework. Increases in either hydrogen or phosphate ion concentrations favor the stabilization of the low affinity structure of even fully liganded carp hemoglobin. We have studied the structural transition from high to low affinity by monitoring the absorption spectra of carp hemoglobins at constant pH as a function of organic phosphate concentration. We find that different spectra are induced in both carp methemoglobin and cyanomethemoglobin by inositol hexaphosphate addition. Furthermore, the dependence of the magnitude of the spectral changes on pH and organic phosphate concentration is the close agreement with that predicted from studies of the ligand binding properties of the molecule.  相似文献   

13.
Wagenbach et al. (1991, BioTechnology, 9, 57-61) have recently developed a system for producing soluble recombinant tetrameric hemoglobin in yeast: hemoglobin begins to appear 4-5 h after induction with galactose, alpha- and beta-globin chains fold in vivo and endogeneously produced heme is incorporated into hemoglobin tetramers. We have further characterized the oxygen-binding properties, as well as the tetramer stability, of recombinant human Hb A made in yeast. After purification by ion-exchange chromatography, a single band at the same position as normal human Hb A was obtained using cellulose acetate electrophoresis. Although the oxy and deoxy forms of purified recombinant Hb A made in yeast were spectrophotometrically identical to native human Hb A, the oxygen-binding curve was shifted slightly left of that for native human Hb A. Further purification of recombinant hemoglobin by FPLC revealed two fractions: one (fraction B) with low cooperativity and high oxygen affinity, and the other (fraction A) with almost identical cooperativity and oxygen affinity compared with native human Hb A. The Bohr effect of fraction A was also identical to native human Hb A. Hemoglobin in fraction B with lowered cooperativity precipitated approximately 1.5 times faster than normal human Hb A during mechanical agitation, while hemoglobin in fraction A with normal cooperativity precipitated with kinetics identical to native human Hb A. These results suggest that some of the recombinant molecules made in yeast fold improperly, and that these molecules may exhibit decreased cooperativity for oxygen binding and decreased stability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The pH dependence of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum and oxygen affinity of cobaltous porphyrin-containing myoglobin (CoMb) have been examined. The hyperfine structures of the EPR spectrum of oxy-CoMb undergo small, reversible pH-dependent changes with pK values of 5.33, 5.55, and 5.25 +/- 0.05 for proto-, meso-, and deutero-CoMb's, respectively, whereas deoxy-CoMb does not exhibit any pH dependence of its EPR spectrum. The partial pressure of oxygen at half-saturation of proto-CoMb decreases from 26 to 42 Torr on lowering the pH from 7.0 to 4.8. For comparison, we have prepared cobaltous porphyrin-containing monomeric Glycera hemoglobin (CoHb (Glycera)), in which the distal histidyl group of myoglobin is replaced by a leucyl residue, and examined the equilibria and kinetics of its oxygenation and EPR spectrum. CoHb (Glycera) has exhibited a very low oxygen affinity (p50 = 7 X 10(2) Torr at 5 degrees) and a large dissociation rate constant (more than 8 X 10(4) S-1 at 5 degrees). The EPR spectrum of oxy-CoHb (Glycera) was affected by neither pH nor replacement of H2O with D2O. Low temperature photodissociation studies by EPR and spectrophotometry have shown that the photolyzed form of the ligated hemoglobin (Glycera) is similar to its deoxy form, in contrast to myoglobin which gives a new intermediate states as the photolyzed form. These differences between CoMb and CoHb (Glycera) are interpreted with relation to the possible role of the distal histidyl residue in CoMb.  相似文献   

15.
It has been established that Molpadia hemoglobin tends to dissociate into subunits as oxygen is bound. The kinetics and equilibria of carbon monoxide and ehtylisocyanide binding reported here show a dependence on protein concentration that supports the conclusions that the aggregated hemoglobin has a lower ligand affinity than the dissociated subunits. This is true for the isolated D-chain as well as for the unfractionated hemolysate that contains four distinct polypeptide chains (A-D). This indicates that even homopolymers of Molpadia hemoglobin have lower ligand affinity than the dissociated subunits. At high protein concentration hemolysates of Molpadia hemoglobin show slight cooperativity. The time course of ligand binding to the deoxy D-chain also suggests cooperative interactions, The low affinity of the aggregated state may have a different molecular explanation than in human hemoglobin were tetramers of identical subunits (as in Hb H) show high oxygen affinity. The absence of tyrosine and histidine at the C-tremini of the Molpadia D-chains also suggests a different stabilization of the low affinity deoxy state. An additional functional difference between Molpadia hemoglobin and human hemoglobin is that organic phosphate do not alter the ligand affinity of the sea cucumber hemoglobin.  相似文献   

16.
A Southern Italian patient homozygous for hemoglobin Lepore disease synthesizes approximately 3% Lepore delta beta-globin chains (relative to alpha chains) in the reticulocytes. Measurement of beta-like RNA sequences by hybridization to complementary DNA specific for beta-globin demonstrates a low level (1--2% relative to alpha sequences) of these sequences in cytoplasmic RNA from reticulocytes or spleen cells, suggesting that the Lepore gene is expressed into mRNA at a lower extent than normal alpha or beta genes; the comparison with the level of beta-like sequences found in nuclear RNA (6--8%) further supports this conclusion and indicates, in addition, that Lepore RNA might be degraded at a faster rate than normal. 2--3% beta-like sequences are found in nuclear RNA in three cases of homozygous beta0-thalassemia, setting the highest possible estimate for the delta-RNA level; this figure suggests that the 'delta-promoter'-dependent Lepore delta beta gene is somehow more actively expressed than the delta gene.  相似文献   

17.
Red-toothed shrews (subfamily Soricinae) exhibit the highest mass-specific rates of O? consumption recorded among eutherian mammals, though surprisingly no data appears to be available on the functional characteristics of their hemoglobin (Hb). As a first step in addressing this shortcoming, we investigated the O? binding characteristics of Taiwanese brown-toothed shrew (Episoriculus fumidus) Hb and its temperature and pH dependence in the absence and presence of anionic red blood cell effectors. Although comparative data regarding the intrinsic O? affinity of other shrew species are currently unavailable, our data suggest that the sensitivity of this high-elevation endemic species' Hb to allosteric effector molecules is similar to that of the two lowland species of white-toothed (crocidurine) shrews examined to date. The efficient exploitation of blood O? reserves by E. fumidus appears to be achieved via synergistic modulation of O? affinity by Cl? and organic phosphates that moreover dramatically lowers the overall enthalpy of oxygenation of their Hb. Oxygen unloading is presumably further enhanced by a relatively high Bohr effect (ΔLog P??/ΔpH = -0.69) and marked reduction in the titratable histidine content (predicted low proton buffering value) of the component globin chains relative to human HbA. Notably, however, the limited data available suggest these latter attributes may be widespread among shrews and hence likely are not adaptations to chronic altitudinal hypoxia per se.  相似文献   

18.
Expression of alpha and beta chains and their post-translational assembly into alpha(2)beta(2) tetramers is fundamental to the formation and function of most vertebrate hemoglobins. There is a strong evolutionary bias that favors expression of equal amounts of the two types of chains, because cooperativity, pH sensitivity, and anionic control of function occurs only for the alpha(2)beta(2) tetramers. Remarkably, an over-production of alpha chains, as in the pathological condition known as beta thalassemia in humans, is adaptive rather than pathological in the bluefish hemoglobin system. The thalassemia of the bluefish is a novel means of providing for oxygen uptake and delivery when low pH conditions incapacitate the highly pH-sensitive Root effect hemoglobins of the fish. Although fish often have pH-insensitive along with highly pH-sensitive hemoglobins, having pH-insensitive alpha chain monomers in circulation is an unusual structural variation. The role of bluefish alpha chains in oxygen transport is enabled by their remarkably lower oxygen affinity relative to human alpha chains. This is the first reported case of a thalassemic condition that is maintained in a species as an adaptive advantage.  相似文献   

19.
Oxygen-linked effects of inositol hexaphosphate occur in heme-containing non-alpha chains isolated from normal human hemoglobin, fetal hemoglobin, and the abnormal human hemoglobin Abruzzo, beta143(H21) His leads to Arg. The occurrence of these effects implies that the chains undergo ligand-linked conformational changes. Inositol hexaphosphate lowers the oxygen affinity of isolated beta and gamma chains by differential binding to their deoxy conformations. Neither 2,3-diphosphoglycerate nor inorganic phosphate produces such an effect. In the case of Abruzzo beta chains, the binding of inorganic phosphate and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate is also oxygen-linked. Stripped beta chains isolated from hemoglobin Abruzzo have much higher oxygen affinity than beta chains isolated from HbA. Their higher oxygen affinity and enhanced allosteric interactions with phosphates account, in large part, for the abnormal functional behavior of the hemoglobin Abruzzo tetramer. In this hemoglobin variant the substitution of arginine for histidine at beta143 involves a residue known to interact with anionic allosteric effectors of hemoglobin. It is of interest that the effect of inositol hexaphosphate observed with isolated gamma chains is comparable to the effect observed with isolated beta chains, even though the gamma143 position is occupied by an uncharged serine residue.  相似文献   

20.
Heat-shocked organisms are known to produce not only "heat shock proteins" but also diadenosine tetraphosphate (Ap4A) and related compounds that may act as "alarmones" that alert the cell to the onset of metabolic stress. We found that Ap4A is synthesized in chicken erythrocytes and that the Ap4A level in the whole blood of heat-stressed birds increases about 10-fold. In searching for alarmone receptors, we found that the diadenosine polyphosphates bind preferentially with high affinity to the deoxy conformation of hemoglobin in a ratio of one/tetramer. The binding affinity of this new class of effectors of hemoglobin function is directly related to the number of phosphates which bridge the nucleotide moieties, with the most dramatic in vitro effect on oxygen affinity being shown by Ap6A. Decreasing effects are brought about by diadenosine penta-, tetra-, tri-, di-, and monophosphates. The association constant for Ap4A binding to deoxygenated human hemoglobin at pH 7.25 is 26 microM-1, close to that for 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. At 100-fold excess over heme, Ap4A increases the P50 of stripped Hb A in 0.05 M HEPES buffer at pH 7.25, 20 degrees C, from 0.85 to 6.03 mm Hg. The binding, which markedly enhances the Bohr effect, involves the beta chain anion-binding site. The kinetics of both ligand binding and dissociation are affected, with a greater quantitative effect on the oxygen dissociation process. Although the low concentration of the diadenosine polyphosphates in red cells precludes a physiologically significant modulation of oxygen delivery, competition with the ATP- and NAD(P)H-binding sites on hemoglobin or regulatory enzymes may prove to be of adaptive significance.  相似文献   

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