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1.
Human hemoglobin containing cobalt protoporphyrin IX or cobalt hemoglobin has been separated into two functionally active alpha and beta subunits using a new method of subunit separation, in which the -SH groups of the isolated subunits were successfully regenerated by treatment with dithiothreitol in the presence of catalase. Oxygen equilibria of the isolated subunit chains were examined over a wide range of temperature using Imai's polarographic method (Imai, K., Morimoto, H., Kotani, M., Watari, H., and Kuroda, M. (1970) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 200, 189-196). Kinetic properties of their reversible oxygenation were investigated by the temperature jump relaxation method at 16 degrees. Electron paramagnetic resonance characteristics of the molecules in both deoxy and oxy states were studies at 77K. The oxygen affinity of the individual regenerated chains was higher than that of the tetrameric cobalt hemoglobin and was independent of pH. The enthalpy changes of the oxygenation have been determined as -13.8 kcal/mol and -16.8 kcal/mol for the alpha and beta chains, respectively. The rates of oxygenation were similar to those reported for iron hemoglobin chains, whereas those of deoxygenation were about 10(2) times larger. The effects of metal substitution on oxygenation properties of the isolated chains were correlated with the results obtained previously on cobalt hemoglobin and cobalt myoglobin. The EPR spectrum of the oxy alpha chain showed a distinctly narrowed hyperfine structure in comparison with that of the oxy beta chain, indicating that the environment around the paramagnetic center (the bound oxygen) is different between these chains. In the deoxy form, EPR spectra of alpha and beta chains were indistinguishable. These observations suggest that one of the inequivalences between alpha and beta chains might exist near the distal histidine group.  相似文献   

2.
Tsai CH  Fang TY  Ho NT  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2000,39(45):13719-13729
Using our Escherichia coli expression system, we have constructed rHb (beta N108Q), a new recombinant hemoglobin (rHb), with the amino acid substitution located in the alpha(1)beta(1) subunit interface and in the central cavity of the Hb molecule. rHb (beta N108Q) exhibits low oxygen affinity, high cooperativity, enhanced Bohr effect, and slower rate of autoxidation of the heme iron atoms from the Fe(2+) to the Fe(3+) state than other low-oxygen-affinity rHbs developed in our laboratory, e.g., rHb (alpha V96W) and rHb (alpha V96W, beta N108K). It has been reported by Olson and co-workers [Carver et al. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 14443-14450; Brantley et al. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 6995-7010] that the substitution of phenylalanine for leucine at position 29 of myoglobin can inhibit autoxidation in myoglobin and at position 29 of the alpha-chain of hemoglobin can lower NO reaction in both the deoxy and the oxy forms of human normal adult hemoglobin. Hence, we have further introduced this mutation, alpha L29F, into beta N108Q. rHb (alpha L29F, beta N108Q) is stabilized against auto- and NO-induced oxidation as compared to rHb (beta N108Q), but exhibits lower oxygen affinity at pH below 7.4 and good cooperativity as compared to Hb A. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies show that rHb (beta N108Q) has similar tertiary structure around the heme pockets and quaternary structure in the alpha(1)beta(1) and alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interfaces as compared to those of Hb A. The tertiary structure of rHb (alpha L29F, beta N108Q) as measured by (1)H NMR, especially the alpha-chain heme pocket region (both proximal and distal histidyl residues), is different from that of CO- and deoxy-Hb A, due to the amino acid substitution at alpha L29F. (1)H NMR studies also demonstrate that rHb (beta N108Q) can switch from the R quaternary structure to the T quaternary structure without changing ligation state upon adding an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate, and reducing the temperature. On the basis of its low oxygen affinity, high cooperativity, and stability against autoxidation, rHb (beta N108Q) is considered a potential candidate for the Hb-based oxygen carrier in a blood substitute system.  相似文献   

3.
We have examined the extensive amino acid sequence data now available for five protein families - the alpha crystallin A chain, myoglobin, alpha and beta hemoglobin, and the cytochromes c - with the goal of estimating the true spatial distribution of base substitutions within genes that code for proteins. In every case the commonly used Poisson density failed to even approximate the experimental pattern of base substitution. For the 87 species of beta hemoglobin examined, for example, the probability that the observed results were from a Poisson process was the minuscule 10(-44). Analogous results were obtained for the other functional families. All the data were reasonably, but not perfectly, described by the negative binomial density. In particular, most of the data were described by one of the very simple limiting forms of this density, the geometric density. The implications of this for evolutionary inference are discussed. It is evident that most estimates of total base substitutions between genes are badly in need of revision.  相似文献   

4.
Opossum methemoglobin differs from methemoglobin A in spectral, spin state, conformational and chemical properties. The primary structural alterations in opossum hemoglobin, including the critical substitution at alpha 58 (E7) His leads to Gln result in the following properties. (a) Major contribution of the spectral transitions due to inositol hexakisphosphate binding arises from the alpha chains. (b) The aquomet to hydroxymet (high-spin to low-spin) transition as a function of pH is slightly retarded resulting in considerable high spin at alkaline pH. (c) The tertiary conformation (t) around the beta hemes, upon transition to a T quaternary state, differs from the known hemoglobin t tertiary structure. (d) Both alpha and beta hemes are susceptible to rapid reduction by ascorbic acid (the reduction rate being tenfold faster than that of methemoglobin A). These properties suggest that the heme environments in both the alpha and beta subunits of opossum hemoglobin are different from those of human hemoglobin A.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The distribution of human hemoglobin variants has previously been studied by Vogel (1972) who concluded that the distribution was random although no statistical analysis was presented. This work points out that there are four biases in the data, one in the manner in which the number of variants is counted, another in the method by which they are detected and which favors charge changes, a third in the fact that for a few codons the same amino acid replacement may be brought about by two or three single nucleotide replacements, and a fourth in the non-random sampling procedure which favors variants producing clinical symptoms. Nevertheless, the distribution of beta hemoglobin variants is confirmed to be random as Vogel suggests. The alpha hemoglobin variants are distinctly non-randomly distributed, the best fit requiring that 69 of the alpha positions be considered invariable. The above biases could account for this result but other considerations combine to suggest the following: 1, about half of all alterations of alpha hemoglobin will not survive to sampling whereas nearly all beta variants can; 2, deleterious mutants that survive to sampling but are destined to be eliminated by selection are more likely to be observed in beta than in alpha hemoglobin; and 3, mutations destined to go to fixation are more likely to occur in beta than in alpha hemoglobin.  相似文献   

6.
We evaluated the volume and polarity changes accompanied by amino acid substitutions along branches of the phylogenetic trees of cytochrome c, myoglobin and hemoglobin alpha and beta chains. In most cases the volume changes accompanied by the substitutions were found to be much larger than the volume of cavities existing in the interior of X-ray-analysed proteins. This implies that the interior of the proteins is very flexible and the necessary space for a larger amino acid residue substitution can be provided by adjusting nearby structures. Also, the volume and polarity changes are not particularly dependent on whether the substituted site is located in the exterior or interior of the proteins. This result supports the concept of the covarions by Fitch and Markowitz, when combined with the known fact that the exterior sites are more variable than the interior ones during protein evolution.  相似文献   

7.
Hemoglobin from an adult camel (Camelus dromedarius) was prepared from the red cell lysate by CM- and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The purified hemoglobin showed a lesser mobility on starch gel electrophoresis at pH 8.5 than that of human hemoglobin C. Native camel hemoglobin contains 95-99% alkali-resistant hemoglobin and in soluble in 2.94 M K2HPO4/KH2PO4 buffer. Different forms of camel hemoglobin show similar ammonium sulfate precipitation curves. Indirect evidence for the stability of camel hemoglobin solutions was obtained from several sources. Spontaneous met-hemoglobin formation is extremely slow and minimal quantities of degradation products appear on starch gel electrophoresis and on chromatographic separation. The alpha and beta chains of camel hemoglobin A were separated on a CM-23 column by the use of a pyridine formate gradient. Large peptide fragments were obtained by tryptic digestion of maleylated alpha and beta chains. The N-terminal structure of the alpha and beta chains and of tryptic maleylated peptides derived from alpha and beta chains are presented. Between adult camel hemoglobin and adult human hemoglobin six amino acid differences in the N-terminal 20 amino acid residues of the alpha chain, at residues: 4, 5, 12, 14, 17, and 19; eight amino acid substitutions were found in the beta chain at positions: 4, 5, 6, 9, 12, 13, 16, and 19. Substitutions at alpha5 Ala leads to Lys, and beta19 Asn leads to Lys, increase the net positive charge of camel hemoglobin by two, while other substitutions result in no charge differences. The molecular basis of the stability of camel adult hemoglobin is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Hemoglobin Saint Mandé (beta N102Y) is a low-affinity mutant with the substitution site situated in the quaternary-sensitive alpha 1 beta 2 interface. In adult hemoglobin the Asn102 beta contributes to the stability of the liganded (R) state, forming a hydrogen bond with Asp94 alpha. The quaternary and tertiary perturbations subsequent to the Tyr for Asn substitution in monocarboxylated hemoglobin Saint Mandé have been investigated by one- and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Analysis of the one-dimensional NMR spectra of the liganded and unliganded samples in 1H2O provides evidence that both R and T quaternary structures of Hb Saint Mandé are different from the corresponding ones in HbA. In the monocarboxylated form of the mutant hemoglobin, at acid pH, we have observed the disappearance of an R-type hydrogen bond and the appearance of a new one whose proton resonates like a deoxy T marker. Using two-dimensional NMR methods and on the basis of previous results on the monocarboxylated HbA, we have obtained a significant number of resonance assignments in the spectra of monocarboxylated Hb Saint Mandé at pH 5.6 in the presence or absence of a strong allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate. This enabled us to characterize the tertiary conformational changes (relative to the liganded normal hemoglobin) triggered by the quaternary-state modification. The observed structural variations are confined within the heme pocket regions but concern both the alpha and beta subunits. Most of them, localized in the C, F, G, and FG segments, could result directly from the side-chain substitution, while others, such as Leu141 beta, could be explained only by long-range interactions.  相似文献   

9.
The kinetics of the thrombin-induced release of fibrinopeptides from several variants of human fibrinogen, and from the plasmin digestion fragment E thereof, have been studied by using an HPLC technique to separate the reaction products. The data were analyzed in terms of a Michaelis-Menten mechanism in which the A alpha and B beta chains compete for thrombin. Phosphorylation of Ser-3 of the A alpha chain appears to increase the rate of release of the corresponding phosphorylated peptide A from fibrinogen, due to enhanced binding of thrombin (lower value of the Michaelis-Menten constant KM). However, phosphorylation does not affect the rate of release of the unphosphorylated A or B peptides. Increase in the length of the gamma chain (at the C-terminus) does not affect the rate of release of any of the fibrinopeptides. The rate of release of the A peptide from fragment E (which is devoid of the B peptide) is similar to that for the complete fibrinogen molecule. These results are in agreement with an earlier conclusion [Martinelli, R. A., & Scheraga, H. A. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 2343] that the A alpha and B beta chains behave independently in their competition for thrombin; i.e., the hydrolyzable Arg-Gly bonds of the A alpha and B beta chains are both accessible to thrombin.  相似文献   

10.
In our previous work, we demonstrated that the replacement of the "heme binding module," a segment from F1 to G5 site, in myoglobin with that of hemoglobin alpha-subunit converted the heme proximal structure of myoglobin into the alpha-subunit type (Inaba, K., Ishimori, K. and Morishima, I. (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 283, 311-327). To further examine the structural regulation by the heme binding module in hemoglobin, we synthesized the betaalpha(HBM)-subunit, in which the heme binding module (HBM) of hemoglobin beta-subunit was replaced by that of hemoglobin alpha-subunit. Based on the gel chromatography, the betaalpha(HBM)-subunit was preferentially associated with the alpha-subunit to form a heterotetramer, alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)], just as is native beta-subunit. Deoxy-alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)] tetramer exhibited the hyperfine-shifted NMR resonance from the proximal histidyl N(delta)H proton and the resonance Raman band from the Fe-His vibrational mode at the same positions as native hemoglobin. Also, NMR spectra of carbonmonoxy and cyanomet alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)] tetramer were quite similar to those of native hemoglobin. Consequently, the heme environmental structure of the betaalpha(HBM)-subunit in tetrameric alpha(2)[betaalpha(HBM)(2)] was similar to that of the beta-subunit in native tetrameric Hb A, and the structural conversion by the module substitution was not clear in the hemoglobin subunits. The contrastive structural effects of the module substitution on myoglobin and hemoglobin subunits strongly suggest different regulation mechanisms of the heme proximal structure between these two globins. Whereas the heme proximal structure of monomeric myoglobin is simply determined by the amino acid sequence of the heme binding module, that of tetrameric hemoglobin appears to be closely coupled to the subunit interactions.  相似文献   

11.
C H Tsai  T J Shen  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1999,38(27):8751-8761
Using our Escherichia coli expression system, we have produced five mutant recombinant (r) hemoglobins (Hbs): r Hb (alpha V96 W), r Hb Presbyterian (beta N108K), r Hb Yoshizuka (beta N108D), r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108K), and r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108D). These r Hbs allow us to investigate the effect on the structure-function relationship of Hb of replacing beta 108Asn by either a positively charged Lys or a negatively charged Asp as well as the effect of replacing alpha 96Val by a bulky, nonpolar Trp. We have conducted oxygen-binding studies to investigate the effect of several allosteric effectors on the oxygenation properties and the Bohr effects of these r Hbs. The oxygen affinity of these mutants is lower than that of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) under various experimental conditions. The oxygen affinity of r Hb Yoshizuka is insensitive to changes in chloride concentration, whereas the oxygen affinity of r Hb Presbyterian exhibits a pronounced chloride effect. r Hb Presbyterian has the largest Bohr effect, followed by Hb A, r Hb (alpha V96W), and r Hb Yoshizuka. Thus, the amino acid substitution in the central cavity that increases the net positive charge enhances the Bohr effect. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies demonstrate that these r Hbs can switch from the R quaternary structure to the T quaternary structure without changing their ligation states upon the addition of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate, and/or by reducing the temperature. r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108K), which has the lowest oxygen affinity among the hemoglobins studied, has the greatest tendency to switch to the T quaternary structure. The following conclusions can be derived from our results: First, if we can stabilize the deoxy (T) quaternary structure of a hemoglobin molecule without perturbing its oxy (R) quaternary structure, we will have a hemoglobin with low oxygen affinity and high cooperativity. Second, an alteration of the charge distribution by amino acid substitutions in the alpha 1 beta 1 subunit interface and in the central cavity of the hemoglobin molecule can influence the Bohr effect. Third, an amino acid substitution in the alpha 1 beta 1 subunit interface can affect both the oxygen affinity and cooperativity of the oxygenation process. There is communication between the alpha 1 beta 1 and alpha 1 beta 2 subunit interfaces during the oxygenation process. Fourth, there is considerable cooperativity in the oxygenation process in the T-state of the hemoglobin molecule.  相似文献   

12.
The aromatic region of the proton NMR spectrum of human adult hemoglobin (HbA) contains resonances from at least 11 titratable histidine residues. Assignments for five beta chain histidines have previously been proposed. In order to further characterize the aromatic spectra of HbA we studied 11 histidine-substituted and -perturbed hemoglobin variants in oxy and deoxy states and at different pH values by 400 MHz NMR spectroscopy. We propose assignments for the resonances corresponding to the C2 protons of His alpha 20, His alpha 72, His alpha 112, and His beta 77 in oxy and deoxy spectra and of His beta 97 and His beta 117 in deoxy spectra. Our assignments for His beta 2 and His beta 117 in the oxy state agree with those previously reported for the CO form, but in the deoxy state our spectra suggest a different assignment. Studies with Hb variants in which a histidine is perturbed by a neighboring substitution suggest additional assignments for His alpha 50 and His alpha 89 and demonstrate a strong dependence of the imidazole ring pK on hydrogen bond interactions and on the net charge of neighboring residues. Some of the newly proposed assignments of histidine resonances are used to discuss specific intermolecular interactions implicating His alpha 20, His beta 77, and His beta 117 in deoxy HbS polymers.  相似文献   

13.
J Feitelson  G McLendon 《Biochemistry》1991,30(20):5051-5055
It has previously been shown that the rates and activation energies for migration molecules of different sizes through myoglobin are very similar. The results were interpreted in terms of conformational changes in the protein structure that facilitate the passage of the different molecules to a similar extent. Here we ask whether the quaternary structural changes that accompany the binding of ligands (O2 or CO) to hemoglobin might influence the migration rate from the solution into the protein's binding site. As a model for the R state of hemoglobin, we used the protein in which the Fe protoporphyrin (FePP) in the alpha subunit was substituted by Zn protoporphyrin (ZnPP) and the oxidized heme was ligated by CN-. The T state of hemoglobin was represented by the protein in which all four FePP groups were substituted by ZnPP. The quenching rate of the excited ZnPP triplet state within the hemoglobin by oxygen, methyl viologen, and anthraquinonesulfonate served as a measure of the migration rate through the protein into the binding site. It was found that the activation energies for all three quenchers were very similar and closely resembled those in myoglobin, suggesting that the migration rates are determined by the subunit structure only and that the quaternary configurational changes do not influence the quenching rates. The implications of the results for electron transfer in proteins are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
To clarify the processes of hemeproteins reduction, three classes of these proteins (ferric, ferrous and desFe) were reduced by hydrated electrons generated by pulse radiolysis. Spectral and kinetic investigations were made on alpha hemoglobin chain and myoglobin. Human alpha chain has been chosen to avoid all ferric contaminations and horse ferric myoglobin to eliminate all ferrous protein fractions. We have successively studied the influences of: the iron presence, its oxidation state (II and III), the protein charge and the iron-ligand nature (H2O, OH-, N3- and CN-). For alpha human hemoglobin chain without metallic ion or with ferrous iron, the reduction rates are the same: 1.1 +/- 0.2.10(10) M-1.s-1. In the case of horse ferric myoglobin, the reduction rates depend principally on the protein charge (from pH 6.3 to pH 9.5, the reduction rate of Mb(FeIII)N3- decreases from 2.5 +/- 0.5.10(10) M-1.s-1 to 1.2 +/- 0.2.10(10) M-1.s-1) and are also modulated by the equilibrium constant of the hemeprotein-ligand association (1.2 +/- 0.2.10(10) M-1.s-1 for Mb(FeIII)N3- and 0.8 +/- 0.2.10(10) M-1.s-1 for Mb(FeIII)CN-, at pH 9.8).  相似文献   

16.
Respiratory proteins such as myoglobin and hemoglobin can, under oxidative conditions, form ferryl heme iron and protein-based free radicals. Ferryl myoglobin can safely be returned to the ferric oxidation state by electron donation from exogenous reductants via a mechanism that involves two distinct pathways. In addition to direct transfer between the electron donor and ferryl heme edge, there is a second pathway that involves "through-protein" electron transfer via a tyrosine residue (tyrosine 103, sperm whale myoglobin). Here we show that the heterogeneous subunits of human hemoglobin, the alpha and beta chains, display significantly different kinetics for ferryl reduction by exogenous reductants. By using selected hemoglobin mutants, we show that the alpha chain possesses two electron transfer pathways, similar to myoglobin. Furthermore, tyrosine 42 is shown to be a critical component of the high affinity, through-protein electron transfer pathway. We also show that the beta chain of hemoglobin, lacking the homologous tyrosine, does not possess this through-protein electron transfer pathway. However, such a pathway can be engineered into the protein by mutation of a specific phenylalanine residue to a tyrosine. High affinity through-protein electron transfer pathways, whether native or engineered, enhance the kinetics of ferryl removal by reductants, particularly at low reductant concentrations. Ferryl iron has been suggested to be a major cause of the oxidative toxicity of hemoglobin-based blood substitutes. Engineering hemoglobin with enhanced rates of ferryl removal, as we show here, is therefore likely to result in molecules better suited for in vivo oxygen delivery.  相似文献   

17.
The dissociation of carbon monoxide from hemoglobin intermediate   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To investigate the mechanism of allosteric switching in human hemoglobin, we have studied the dissociation of the ligand (CO) from several intermediate ligation states by a stopped-flow kinetic technique that utilizes competitive binding of CO by microperoxidase. The hemoglobin species investigated include Hb(CO)4, the diliganded symmetrical species (alpha beta-CO)2 and (alpha-CO beta)2, and the di- and monoliganded asymmetrical species (alpha-CO beta-CO)(alpha beta), (alpha-CO beta)(alpha beta-CO), (alpha beta-CO) (alpha beta), and (alpha-CO beta)(alpha beta). They were obtained by rapid reduction with dithionite of the corresponding valence intermediates that in turn were obtained by chromatography or by hybridization. The nature and concentration of the intermediates were determined by isoelectric focusing at -25 degrees C. The study was performed at varying hemoglobin concentrations (0.1, 0.02, and 0.001 mM [heme]), pH (6.0, 7.0, 8.0), with and without inositol hexaphosphate. The results indicate that: (a) hemoglobin concentration in the 0.1-0.02 mM range does not significantly affect the kinetic rates; (b) the alpha chains dissociate CO faster than the beta chains; (c) the symmetrical diliganded intermediates show cooperativity with respect to ligand dissociation that disappears in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate; (d) the monoliganded intermediates dissociate CO faster than the diliganded intermediates; (e) the asymmetrical diliganded intermediates are functionally different from the symmetrical species.  相似文献   

18.
Rujan IN  Russu IM 《Proteins》2002,49(3):413-419
The structural transition induced by ligand binding in human hemoglobin encompasses quaternary structure changes at the interfaces between the two alphabeta dimers. In contrast, the interfaces between alpha and beta subunits within the same dimer (i.e., alpha1beta1 and alpha2beta2 interfaces) are structurally invariant. Previous work from this laboratory using NMR spectroscopy has identified four sites at the intradimeric alpha1beta1 and alpha2beta2 interfaces that, although structurally invariant, experience significant changes in the rates of proton exchange upon ligand binding. These sites are Hisalpha103(G10) and Hisalpha122(H5) in each alpha subunit of the hemoglobin tetramer. In the present work, we show that the proton exchange at the Hisalpha103(G10) sites is affected by the interactions of hemoglobin with chloride ions. Increasing concentrations of chloride ions at pH 6.45 and at 37 degrees C enhance the exchange rate of the Hisalpha103(G10) N(epsilon 2) proton. The enhancement is greater in deoxygenated than in ligated hemoglobin. In the framework of the local unfolding model for proton exchange, these results suggest that the structural free energy and/or the proton transfer reactions at the Hisalpha103(G10) sites depend on the concentration of chloride ions. Therefore, the ligand-induced changes at the Hisalpha103(G10) sites are modulated by the allosteric effect of chloride ions on hemoglobin.  相似文献   

19.
The structure of the beta chain of adult bovine hemoglobin Bali of the Bali cattle was determined and compared to those of beta A, beta B, and other beta-chain variants of domestic cattle reported previously. The lysine residue at beta A18 was substituted by histidine in beta Bali18. This change requires two base substitutions at the codon and is also found in beta B18. The beta B chain differs from the beta A chain at residue Nos. 15, 18, and 119. It was concluded that a common ancestor of the beta B and beta Bali first diverged from the beta A chain through the Lys leads to His substitution. This fact indicates that the high degree of dimorphism of the beta A and beta B chains in Indian humped cattle is a result of its hybrid origin. An evolutionary tree for the bovine hemoglobin beta-chain variants was constructed based on parsimonious evolution and homology with related species.  相似文献   

20.
J S Philo  U Dreyer    J W Lary 《Biophysical journal》1996,70(4):1949-1965
The kinetics of CO binding and changes in quaternary structure for symmetric valency hybrids of human hemoglobin have been extensively studied by laser photolysis techniques. Both alpha+beta and alpha beta+ hybrids were studied with five different ferric ligands, over a broad range of CO concentrations and photolysis levels. After full CO photolysis, the hybrid tetramers switch extensively and rapidly (< 200 microseconds) to the T quaternary structure. Both R --> T and T --> R transition rates for valency hybrid tetramers with 0 and 1 bound CO have been obtained, as well as the CO association rates for alpha and beta subunits in the R and T states. The results reveal submillisecond R reversible T interconversion, and, for the first time, the changes in quaternary rates and equilibria due to binding a single CO per tetramer have been resolved. The data also show significant alpha-beta differences in quaternary dynamics and equilibria. The allosteric constants do not vary with the spin states of the ferric subunits as predicted by the Perutz stereochemical model. For the alpha beta+CN hybrid the kinetics are heterogeneous and imply partial conversion to a T-like state with very low (seconds) R reversible T interconversion.  相似文献   

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