Hemoglobins,XLVIIII |
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Authors: | Gisela Liljeqvist Sven Paléus Gerhard Braunitzer |
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Affiliation: | (1) Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie, Abteilung Proteinchemie, D-8033 Martinsried bei München, Federal Republic of Germany;(2) Present address: Färnebogatan 64IX, S-123 42 Farsta, Sweden;(3) Present address: Rosenlunds Sjukhus, Tideliusgatan 12, S-116 69 Stockholm, Sweden |
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Abstract: | Summary Hagfish hemoglobin has three main components, one of which is Hb III. It is monomeric and consists of 148 amino acid residues (M = 17 350). Its complete primary structure, previously published, is discussed here. The proximal amino acid (F8) of the heme linkage is histidine as always in the hemoglobins, but the regularly expected distal histidine E7 is substituted by glutamine. This substitution, leading to a new kind of heme linkage, has hitherto only been demonstrated in opossum hemoglobin. It is suggested that E7, Gln, is directed out of the heme pocket, and that the adjacent Ell, Ile, is directed toward the inside of the pocket, giving the distal heme contact instead of histidine.Myxine Hb III has an additional tail of 9 amino acid residues at its N-terminal end, as has the hemoglobin ofLampetra fluviatilis. The genetic codes ofMyxine andLampetra hemoglobins show 117 differences, in spite of many morphological resemblances between hagfish and lamprey. Their primary hemoglobin structures show differences substantial enough to bo compatible with the divergence of the two families some 400–500 million years ago. |
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Keywords: | Hemoglobin Myxine glutinosa Primary structure Heme linkage Phylogeny |
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