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1.
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   

2.
The hydrogen exchange kinetics of the N delta H proton in His F8 of iodoacetamide- and N-ethylmaleimide-treated human deoxyhemoglobins were studied using a NMR method. Comparison with unmodified hemoglobin shows that the reagents, covalently bound to Cys beta 93, significantly increase (about one order of magnitude) the exchange kinetics in beta chains only. This effect was partially reversed by the strong allosteric effector inositol hexaphosphate. Study of the high resolution 400-MHz NMR spectra of modified oxy- and deoxy-hemoglobins permitted localization of the extent of chemically induced structural perturbations. The resonances corresponding to hydrogen bonds specific to the deoxy conformation are not changed, in accord with the preserved cooperativity. Under the experimental conditions (0.1 M bis-Tris, 10 mM Cl-, pH 7.2), the salt bridge at the C terminus of the beta chain in the deoxy state (His beta 146-Asp beta 94) is perturbed by both modifications. The His beta 146 appears to be rendered more immobilized by the reagents in the oxy conformation. From the resonances corresponding to heme pocket protons of oxyhemoglobin it is deduced that the perturbations do not extend over the distal side of the heme pocket but are limited to the FG, F, and HC segments of the beta chain.  相似文献   

3.
L W Fung  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1975,14(11):2526-2535
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of human hemoglobins in water reveal several exchangeable protons which are indicators of the quaternary structures of both the liganded and unliganded molecules. A comparison of the spectra of normal human adult hemoglobin with those of mutant hemoglobins Chesapeake (FG4alpha92 Arg yields Leu), Titusville (G1alpha94 Asp yields Asn), M Milwaukee (E11beta67 Val yields Glu), Malmo (FG4beta97 His yields Gln), Kempsey (G1beta99 Asp yields Asn), Yakima (G1beta99 Asp yields His), and New York (G15beta113 Val yields Glu), as well as with those of chemically modified hemoglobins Des-Arg(alpha141), Des-His(beta146), NES (on Cys-beta93)-Des-Arg(alpha141), and spin-labeled hemoglobin [Cys-beta93 reacted with N-(1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)iodoacetamide], suggests that the proton in the important hydrogen bond between the tyrosine at C7alpha42 and the aspartic acid at G1beta99, which anchors the alpha1beta2 subunits of deoxyhemoglobin (a characteristic feature of the deoxy quaternary structure), is responsible for the resonance at -9.4 ppm from water at 27 degrees. Another exchangeable proton resonance which occurs at -6.4 ppm from H2O is a spectroscopic indicator of the deoxy structure. A resonance at -5.8 ppm from H2O, which is an indicator of the oxy conformation, is believed to originate from the hydrogen bond between the aspartic acid at G1alpha94 and the asparagine at G4beta102 in the alpha1beta2 subunit interface (a characteristic feature of the oxy quaternary structure). In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH 6.2 both the -6.4- and the -5.8ppm resonances are present but not the -9.4-ppm resonance. Upon the addition of inositol hexaphosphate to methemoglobin at pH 6.2, the usual resonance at -9.4 ppm is shifted to -10 ppm and the resonance at 6.4 ppm is not observed. In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH greater than or equal to 7.6 with or without inositol hexaphosphate, the resonance at -5.8 ppm is present, but not those at -10 and -6.4 ppm, suggesting that methemoglobin at high pH has an oxy-like structure. Two resonances (at -8.2 and -7.3 ppm) which remain invariant in the two quaternary structures could come from exchangeable protons in the alpha1beta1 subunit interface and/or other exchangeable protons in the hemoglobin molecule which undergo no conformational changes during the oxygenation process. These exchangeable proton resonances serve as excellent spectroscopic probes of the quaternary structures of the subunit interfaces in studies of the molecular mechanism of cooperative ligand binding to hemoglobin.  相似文献   

4.
Hydrogen exchange experiments using functional labeling and fragment separation methods were performed to study interactions at the C terminus of the hemoglobin beta subunit that contribute to the phosphate effect and the Bohr effect. The results show that the H-exchange behavior of several peptide NH at the beta chain C terminus is determined by a transient, concerted unfolding reaction involving five or more residues, from the C-terminal His146 beta through at least Ala142 beta, and that H-exchange rate can be used to measure the stabilization free energy of interactions, both individually and collectively, at this locus. In deoxy hemoglobin at pH 7.4 and 0 degrees C, the removal of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (DPG) or pyrophosphate (loss of a salt to His143 beta) speeds the exchange of the beta chain C-terminal peptide NH protons by 2.5-fold (at high salt), indicating a destabilization of the C-terminal segment by 0.5 kcal of free energy. Loss of the His146 beta 1 to Asp94 beta 1 salt link speeds all these protons by 6.3-fold, indicating a bond stabilization free energy of 1.0 kcal. When both these salt links are removed together, the effect is found to be strictly additive; all the protons exchange faster by 16-fold indicating a loss of 1.5 kcal in stabilization free energy. Added salt is slightly destabilizing when DPG is present but provides some increased stability, in the 0.2 kcal range, when DPG is absent. The total allosteric stabilization energy at each beta chain C terminus in deoxy hemoglobin under these conditions is measured to be 3.8 kcal (pH 7.4, 0 degrees C, with DPG). In oxy hemoglobin at pH 7.4 and 0 degrees C, stability at the beta chain C terminus is essentially independent of salt concentration, and the NES modification, which in deoxy hemoglobin blocks the His146 beta to Asp94 beta salt link, has no destabilizing effect, either at high or low salt. These results appear to show that the His146 beta salt link, which participates importantly in the alkaline Bohr effect, does not reform to Asp94 beta or to any other salt link acceptor in a stable way in oxy hemoglobin at low or high salt conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Bis(3,5-dibromosalicyl) fumarate was used to crosslink hemoglobin both in the oxy and deoxy states. This double headed diaspirin was known to crosslink oxy Hb A selectively between Lys 82 beta 1 and Lys 82 beta 2 (Walder, J. A., et al. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 4265) and deoxy Hb A between Lys 99 alpha 1 and Lys 99 alpha 2 (Chatterjee R. Y., et al. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 9929). The autoxidation at 37 degrees C of oxy alpha 99 crosslinked hemoglobin was found to be 1.8 times as fast as that of Hb A while that of the oxy beta 82 crosslinked hemoglobin was only 1.2 times as fast. After 5 hours the formation of methemoglobin in the alpha crosslinked Hb A is 21.3% compared to 10.8% in beta crosslinked Hb A and 6.4% in Hb A. These results may effect the proposed use of alpha 99 crosslinked hemoglobin as a blood substitute by demonstrating the need for protection from autoxidation during storage.  相似文献   

6.
Sickle cell nitrosyl hemoglobin was examined for gelation by an ultracentrifugal method previously described (Briehl &; Ewert, 1973) and by birefringence. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate gelation which exhibited the endothermic temperature dependence seen in gels of deoxyhemoglobin S was observed by both techniques. In the absence of inositol hexaphosphate no gelation was observed, nor did nitrosyl hemoglobin A exhibit gelation. On the assumption that gelation is dependent on the deoxy or T (low ligand affinity) as opposed to the oxy or R (high ligand affinity) quaternary structure this supports the conclusion that nitrosyl hemoglobin S in inositol hexaphosphate assumes the T structure, in contrast to the other liganded ferrohemoglobin derivatives oxy and carbon monoxide hemoglobin. Assuming further that the quaternary structures and isomerizations are the same in hemoglobins A and S it can also be concluded that nitrosyl hemoglobin A in inositol hexaphosphate assumes the T state. Since no gelation was seen in stripped nitrosyl hemoglobin S, inositol hexaphosphate serves to effect an R to T switch in this derivative. Thus R-T isomerization in nitrosyl hemoglobin occurs without change in ligand binding at the sixth position of the heme group confirming the conclusion of Salhany (1974) and Salhany et al. (1974).Lowering of the pH toward 6 favors gelation of NO hemoglobin S as it does of deoxy and aquomethemoglobin S (Briehl &; Ewert, 1973,1974), consistent with a favoring of the T structure due to strengthening of the interchain salt bridges and the binding of inositol hexaphosphate and/or changes in site-to-site interactions on which gelation depends.  相似文献   

7.
Using variable temperature techniques, the spin label spectral resolution of hemoglobin labeled at the beta93 cysteines with N-(1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)iodonacetamide has been greatly enhanced. The effects of different ligands, inositol hexaphosphate, pH and salt concentration upon spin labeled ferrous and ferric hemoglobin indicate that the beta chain tertiary structure exhibits considerable variability within the oxy and deoxy quaternary structures. From these studies ligand and spin state changes both appear to be of significance in producing structural changes; binding of inositol hexaphosphate then produces further structural changes secondary in amplitude.  相似文献   

8.
ESR spectra of the carbonmonoxy, oxy, and deoxy derivatives of hemoglobin Izu [Hb Izu (Macaca): beta 83 (EF 7) Gly leads to Cys] labeled at cysteine beta 83 with maleimide spin label have been observed in the presence and absence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and inositol hexaphosphate. The tau c values obtained from the spectra indicated that inositol hexaphosphate binds to all the derivatives of Hb Izu, but 2,3-diphosphoglycerate only to the deoxy derivatives.  相似文献   

9.
Cobalt hemoglobin Zürich (alpha 2 beta 263His leads to Arg) has been successfully reconstituted from the apohemoglobin Zürich and cobaltous protoporphyrin IX. The oxygen affinity of cobalt hemoglobin Zurich, as well as that of iron hemoglobin Zürich, were measured in the absence and presence of organic phosphate and Cl-. The overall oxygen affinity of cobalt hemoglobin Zürich was found to be higher and the cooperativity as measured by the n value was smaller than those of cobalt hemoglobin A. Organic phosphate and Cl- affect the oxygen equilibrium properties of cobalt hemoglobin Zürich in a manner similar to that of cobalt hemoglobin A, but to a lesser extant than cobalt hemoglobin A. The EPR spectrum of oxy cobalt hemoglobin Zürich is less sensitive to the replacement of the buffer system from H2O to 2H2O, indicating that the hydrogen bond between the distal amino acid residue and the bound oxygen is not formed in the abnormal beta subunits. The deoxy EPR spectrum of cobalt hemoglobin Zürich is similar to that of deoxy cobalt hemoglobin A, suggesting that the deoxy cobalt hemoglobin Zürich is predominantly in the deoxy quaternary structure (T state).  相似文献   

10.
The primary structures of the alpha- and beta-chains from greylag goose (Anser anser) hemoglobin are given. The sequence was deduced automatically in the sequenator. They differ from chicken alpha-chains in the exchange of 30, from beta-chains in the exchange of only 8 amino acid residues, respectively. The contact points of inositol pentaphosphate with the beta-chains are identical in chicken and greylag goose. Unequal evolution of the beta-chains was found, which is published here for the first time. By comparing the sequences of chicken and greylag goose and considering paleontological data, we found the mutation rate of the alpha-chains to be normal, i.e. 6 million years/mutation. This corresponds to the values for other species. The mutation rate of beta-chains is reduced and was calculated at 25 million years/mutation. This is possibly due to a specific function of beta-chains. This paper is the basis of our attempt to explain on a molecular basis the ability of bar-headed goose (Anser indicus) to fly and breathe at high altitudes.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
13.
Li R  Nagai Y  Nagai M 《Chirality》2000,12(4):216-220
The CD band of human adult hemoglobin (Hb A) at 280 approximately 290 nm shows a pronounced change from a small positive band to a definite negative band on the oxy (R) to deoxy (T) structural transition. This change has been suggested to be due to environmental alteration of Tyrs (alpha42, alpha140, and beta145) or beta37 Trp residues located at the alpha1beta2 subunit interface by deoxygenation. In order to evaluate contributions of alpha140Tyr and beta37Trp to this change of CD band, we compared the CD spectra of two mutant Hbs, Hb Rouen (alpha140Tyr-->His) and Hb Hirose (beta37Trp-->Ser) with those of Hb A. Both mutant Hbs gave a distinct, but smaller negative CD band at 287nm in the deoxy form than that of deoxyHb A. Contributions of alpha140Tyr and beta37Trp to the negative band at the 280 approximately 290 nm region were estimated from difference spectra to be 30% and 26%, respectively. These results indicate that the other aromatic amino acid residues, alpha42Tyr and beta145Tyr, at the alpha1beta2 interface, are also responsible for the change of the CD band upon the R-->T transition of Hb A.  相似文献   

14.
Hemoglobin A, cross-linked between Lys 99 alpha 1 and Lys 99 alpha 2, was used to obtain a partially oxidized tetramer in which only one of the four hemes remains reduced. Because of the absence of dimerization, asymmetric, partially oxidized derivatives are stable. This is evidenced by the fact that eight of the ten possible oxidation states could be resolved by analytical isoelectric focusing. A triply oxidized hemoglobin population HbXL+3 was isolated whose predominant component was (alpha + alpha +, beta + beta 0). This triferric preparation was examined as a possible model for the triliganded state of ferrous HbA. The aquomet and cyanomet derivatives were characterized by their CD spectra and their kinetic reactions with carbon monoxide. CD spectra in the region of 287 nm showed no apparent change in quaternary structure upon binding ligand to the fourth, ferrous heme. The spectra of the oxy and deoxy forms of the cyanomet and aquomet derivatives of HbXL+3 differed insignificantly and were characteristic of the normal liganded state. Upon addition of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP), both the oxy and deoxy derivatives of the high-spin triaquomet species converted to the native deoxy conformation. In contrast, IHP had no such effect on the conformation of the low-spin cyanomet derivatives of HbXL+3. The kinetics of CO combination as measured by stopped-flow and flash photolysis techniques present a more complex picture. In the presence of IHP the triaquomet derivative does bind CO with rate constants indicative of the T state whether these are measured by the stopped-flow technique or by flash photolysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The crystal structure of human hemoglobin crosslinked between the Lysbeta82 residues has been determined at 2.30 A resolution. The crosslinking reaction was performed under oxy conditions using bis(3, 5-dibromosalicyl) fumarate; the modified hemoglobin has increased oxygen affinity and lacks cooperativity. Since the crystallization occurred under deoxy conditions, the resulting structure displays conformational characteristics of both the (oxy) R and the (deoxy) T-states. beta82XLHbA does not fully reach its T-state conformation due to the presence of the crosslink. The R-state-like characteristics of deoxy beta82XLHbA include the position of the distal Hisbeta63 (E7) residue, indicating a possible reason for the high oxygen affinity of this derivative. Other areas of the molecule, particularly those thought to be important in the allosteric transition, such as Tyrbeta145 (HC2) and the switch region involving Proalpha(1)44 (CD2), Thralpha(1)41 (C6) and Hisbeta(2)97 (FG4), are in intermediate positions between the R and T-states. Thus, the structure may represent a stabilized intermediate in the allosteric transition of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

16.
Effects of anions on the molecular basis of the Bohr effect of hemoglobin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
High-resolution 1H-NMR spectroscopy has been used to investigate the molecular basis of the Bohr effect in human normal adult hemoglobin in the presence of anions which serve as heterotropic effectors, i.e., Cl-, Pi, and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. The individual H+ equilibria of 22-26 histidyl residues of hemoglobin in both deoxy and carbonmonoxy forms have been measured under buffer conditions chosen to demonstrate the effects of anion binding. The results indicate that beta 2His residues are binding sites for Cl- and Pi in both deoxy and carbonmonoxy forms, and that the affinity of this site for these anions is greater in the deoxy form. Recently assigned, the resonance of beta 146His does not show evidence of involvement in anion binding. The results also indicate that the binding of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate at the central cavity between the two beta-chains in deoxyhemoglobin involves the beta 2His residues, and that the 2,3-diphosphoglycerate-binding site in carbonmonoxyhemoglobin may remain similar to that in deoxyhemoglobin. The interactions of Cl-, Pi and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate also result in changes in the pK values for other surface histidyl residues which vary in both magnitude and direction. The array of pK changes is specific for the interaction of each effector. The participation of beta 2His in the Bohr effect demonstrates that this residue can release or capture protons, depending on its protonation properties and its linkage to anion binding, and therefore provides an excellent illustration of the variable roles of a given amino acid. Although beta 146His does not bind anions, its contributions to the Bohr effect are substantially affected by the presence of anions. These results demonstrate that long-range electrostatic and/or conformational effects of anions binding play significant roles in the molecular basis of the Bohr effect of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

17.
The abnormal human hemoglobin Malm? (beta97FG4 His leads to Gln) has been studied and its properties are compared with those of normal adult hemoglobin A. The data presented here show that the ring-current shifted proton resonances of both HbCO and HbO2 Malm? are very different from the corresponding forms of Hb A. The hyperfine shifted proton resonances of deoxy-Hb Malm? do not differ drastically from those of deoxy-Hb A. This result, together with the finding that the exchangeable proton resonances of the deoxy form of the two hemoglobins are similar, suggests that unliganded Hb Malm? can assume a deoxy-like quaternary structure both in the absence and presence of organic phosphates We have also compared the properties of Hb Malm? with those of Hb Chesapeake (alpha92FG4 Arg leads to Leu). This allows us to study the properties of two abnormal human hemoglobins with mutations at homologous positions of the alpha and beta chains in the three-dimenstional structure of the hemoglobin molecule. Our present results suggest that the mutaion at betaFG4 has its greatest effect on the teritiary structure of the heme pocket of the liganded forms of the hemoglobin while the mutation at alphaFG4 alters the deoxy structure of the hemoglogin molecule but does not alter the teriary structure of the heme pockets of the liganded form of the hemoglobin molecule. Both hemoglobins undergo a transition from the deoxy (T) to the oxy (R) quaternary structure upon ligation. The abnormally high oxygen affinities and low cooperativities of these two hemoglobins must therefore be due to either the structural differences which we have observed and/or to an altered transition between the T and R structures.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of pressure on the tertiary and quaternary structures of human oxy, carbonmonoxy, and deoxyhemoglobin was examined by high pressure NMR spectroscopy at 300 MHz. The increased pressure displaced the ring current-shifted gamma 1-methyl resonance of beta E11 valine for oxy- and carbonmonoxyhemoglobin to the upfield side, whereas that of the alpha subunit was insensitive to pressure. Such a preferential pressure-induced upfield shift for the beta E11 valine gamma 1-methyl signal was also encountered for the isolated carbonmonoxy beta chain. For deoxyhemoglobin, hyperfine shifted resonances of the heme peripheral proton groups and the proximal histidyl NH proton for the beta subunit were pressure-dependent, in contrast to the pressure-insensitive responses for these resonances of the alpha subunit. These results indicate the structural nonequivalence of the pressure-induced structural changes in the alpha and beta subunits of hemoglobin. The exchangeable proton resonances due to the intra- and intersubunit hydrogen bonds which have been used as the oxy and deoxy quaternary structural probes were not changed upon pressurization. From all of above results, it was concluded that pressure induces the tertiary structural change preferentially at the beta heme pocket of the ferrous hemoglobin derivatives with the quaternary structure retained.  相似文献   

19.
T Y Fang  M Zou  V Simplaceanu  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1999,38(40):13423-13432
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to construct two mutant recombinant hemoglobins (rHbs), rHb(betaH116Q) and rHb(betaH143S). Purified rHbs were used to assign the C2 proton resonances of beta116His and beta143His and to resolve the ambiguous assignments made over the past years. In the present work, we have identified the C2 proton resonances of two surface histidyl residues of the beta chain, beta116His and beta143His, in both the carbonmonoxy and deoxy forms, by comparing the proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) with those of rHbs. Current assignments plus other previous assignments complete the assignments for all 24 surface histidyl residues of human normal adult hemoglobin. The individual pK values of 24 histidyl residues of Hb A were also measured in deuterium oxide (D(2)O) in 0.1 M N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N'-2-ethanesulfonic acid (HEPES) buffer in the presence of 0.1 M chloride at 29 degrees C by monitoring the shifts of the C2 proton resonances of the histidyl residues as a function of pH. Among those surface histidyl residues, beta146His has the biggest contribution to the alkaline Bohr effect (63% at pH 7.4), and beta143His has the biggest contribution to the acid Bohr effect (71% at pH 5.1). alpha20His, alpha112His, and beta117His have essentially no contribution; alpha50His, alpha72His, alpha89His, beta97His, and beta116His have moderate positive contributions; and beta2His and beta77His have a moderate negative contribution to the Bohr effect. The sum of the contributions from 24 surface histidyl residues accounted for 86% of the alkaline Bohr effect at pH 7.4 and about 55% of the acid Bohr effect at pH 5.1. Although beta143His is located in the binding site for 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG) according to the crystal structure of deoxy-Hb A complexed with 2, 3-BPG, beta143His is not essential for the binding of 2,3-BPG in the neutral pH range according to the proton NMR and oxygen affinity studies presented here. With the accurately measured and assigned individual pK values for all surface histidyl residues, it is now possible to evaluate the Bohr effect microscopically for novel recombinant Hbs with important functional properties, such as low oxygen affinity and high cooperativity. The present study further confirms the importance of a global electrostatic network in regulating the Bohr effect of the hemoglobin molecule.  相似文献   

20.
In order to inquire into the molecular mechanism underlying the cooperative ligand binding to hemoglobin (Hb), conformational interaction at the interfaces between subunits are investigated on the basis of the atomic coordinates of human deoxy and human carbonmonoxy Hbs. Hypothetical intermediate structures are used, each of which is obtained from the procedure where one or more subunits in deoxy Hb are replaced by the corresponding CO-liganded subunits in carbonmonoxy Hb using the method of superimposition of two sets of atomic coordinates. When either alpha or beta subunit is substituted with the corresponding subunit in carbonmonoxy Hb, serious steric hindrances are produced between alpha 1FG4(92)Arg and beta 2C3(37)Trp or between alpha 1C6(41)Thr and beta 2FG4(97)His, all of which belong to the allosteric core affected directly by ligand binding. These steric hindrances become more serious when both alpha 1(alpha 2) and beta 2(beta 1) subunits are substituted. Therefore the change in the relative distance between iron atom and porphyrin by ligation results in strain in the C-terminal residues as an effect of the steric hindrance between the FG and C segments. However, no steric hindrance can be seen between subunits when the subunits in carbonmonoxy Hb are substituted with the corresponding subunits in deoxy Hb. The nature of the quaternary structural change from liganded to deoxy Hb seems to be different from that from deoxy to liganded Hb.  相似文献   

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