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1.
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   

2.
The formation of deoxyhemoglobin was examined by measuring the heme spectral change that accompanies the aggregation of isolated alpha and beta chains. At low hemeconcentrations (less than 10(-5) M), tetramer formation can be described by two consecutive, second order reactions representing the aggregation of monomers followed by the association of alphabeta dimers. At neutral pH, the rates of monomer and dimer aggregation are roughly the same, approximately 5 X 10(5) M(-1) X(-1) at 20 degrees. Raising or lowering the pH results in a uniform decrease of both aggregation rates due presumably to repulsion of positively charged subunits at acid pH and repulsion of negatively charged subunits at alkaline pH. Addition of p-hydroxymercuribenzoate to alpha chains lowers the rate of monomer aggregation whereas addition of mercurials to the beta subunits appears to lower both the rate of monomer and the rate of dimer aggregation. At high heme concentrations (greater than 10(-5) M) or in the presence of organic phosphates, the rate of chain aggregation becomes limited, in part, by the slow dissociation of beta chain tetramers. In the case of inositol hexaphosphate, the rate of hemoglobin formation exhibits a bell-shaped dependence on phosphate concentration. When intermediate concentrations of inositol hexaphosphate (approximately 10(-4 M) are preincubated with beta subunits, a slow first order time course is observed and exhibits a half-time of about 8 min. As more inositol hexaphosphate is added, the chain aggregation reaction begins to occur more rapidly. Eventually at about 10(-2) M inositol hexaphospate, the time course becomes almost identical to that observed in the absence of phosphates. The increase in the velocity of the chain aggregation reaction at high phosphate concentrations suggests strongly that inositol hexaphosphate binds to beta monomers and, if added in sufficiently large amounts, promotes beta4 dissociation. A quantitative analysis of these results showed that the affinity of beta monomers for inositol hexaphosphate is the same as that of alphabeta dimers. Only when tetramers are formed, either alpha2beta2 or beta4, is a marked increase in affinity for inositol hexaphosphate observed.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics of CO association to and dissociation from the two isomers of monoliganded species alpha ICO beta I(alpha II beta II) and alpha I beta I (alpha II beta COII) has been studied by double-mixing stopped-flow and microperoxidase methods. The monoliganded species were generated by hybridization between excess ferric Hb and alpha CO2 beta +2 or alpha +2 beta CO2 prepared by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). The results indicated that: 1) there were no significant differences in the reactivities of alpha and beta chains in the first step of ligation; 2) in the second step of ligation there was significant cooperativity in the reaction of deoxyhemoglobin with 0.05 or 0.1 equivalent of CO. Diliganded species were therefore formed in significant amounts. The double-mixing HPLC results suggested that in the second step of ligation alpha chains reacted faster than the beta chains, and the main diliganded species formed was alpha I beta ICO (alpha IICO beta II) or its isomer alpha ICO I(alpha II beta IICO). These results seem to indicate that the reaction of the first CO is mostly random and in the second step of ligation CO binds more to the tetramers in which one beta chain is already ligated: alpha I beta I (alpha II beta II) + CO----alpha ICO beta I (alpha II beta II) and alpha I beta ICO (alpha II beta II) + CO----alpha I beta ICO (alpha IICO beta II).  相似文献   

4.
The reaction of apohemoglobin with carbonmonoxy heme and with carbonmonoxy heme dimethyl ester was investigated in the presence and absence of inositol hexaphosphate. The binding stoichiometry of both heme derivatives to apohemoglobin was not affected by the presence of the polyphosphate, while, in both cases, the overall rate of recombination was substantially decreased. The absence of the negatively charged carboxyl groups in the dimethyl ester derivative of the heme indicated that the effect of inositol hexaphosphate on the reaction of apohemoglobin with heme was not due to electrostatic repulsions and resulted from conformational changes occurring upon the interaction of apohemoglobin with inositol hexaphosphate. Qualitative treatment of the kinetic data suggests that these conformational changes destabilize the intermediates of the reaction by increasing their redissociation into the original components. Also, benzenehexacarboxylate produced conformational changes in apohemoglobin and decreased its rate of reaction with carbonmonoxy heme, proving the aspecificity of the interaction of apohemoglobin with polyanions.  相似文献   

5.
We have measured the intrinsic CO dissociation rates from the subunits of the human hemoglobin tetramers (alpha CO beta NO)2 and (alpha NO beta CO)2 using microperoxidase and a stopped-flow spectrophotometer. The dissociation of NO is negligible. The rate constants for the and the subunits are similar (0.014 s-1 vs. 0.011 s-1, respectively, at pH 7, 20 C; and 0.016 s-1 for both in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate), indicating that they are equivalent in the first step of the CO dissociation. Therefore, the chain unequality observed in the third and fourth steps (Samaja, M., Rovida, E., Niggeler, M., Perrella, M., and Rossi-Bernardi, L. (1987). J. Biol. Chem.: 262, 4528-4533) are not due to the intrinsic properties of the subunits, but to the conformational state of the molecule.  相似文献   

6.
The equilibria of oxygen binding to and kinetics of CO combination with the symmetrical iron-zinc hybrids of a series of variants of human adult hemoglobin A have been measured at pH 7 in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). In addition, the kinetics of CO combination have also been measured in the absence of IHP. The hybrids have the heme groups of either the alpha or the beta subunits replaced by zinc protoporphyrin IX, which is unable to bind a ligand and is a good model for permanently deoxygenated heme. The variants examined involve residues located in the alpha1beta2 interface of the hemoglobin tetramer. Alterations of residues located in the hinge region of the interface are found to affect the properties of both the alpha and the beta subunits of the protein. In contrast, alterations of residues in the switch region of the interface have substantial effects only on the mutant subunit and are poorly communicated to the normal partner subunit. When the logarithms of the rate constants for the combination of the first CO molecule with a single subunit in the presence of IHP are analyzed as functions of the logarithms of the dissociation equilibrium constants for the binding of the first oxygen under the same conditions, a linear relationship is found. The relationship is somewhat different for the alpha and beta subunits, consistent with the well-known differences in the geometries of their ligand binding sites.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The pulse radiolysis of solutions of adult human methemogolbin was used in order to reduce a single heme iron within the protein tetramers. The valence hybrids thus formed were reacted with oxygen. Kinetics of the reactions were studied. The effects of pH and inositol hexaphosphate were examined. The kinetics of the ligation of oxygen to stripped valence hybrids showed a single phase behavior at the pH range 6.5 to 9. As the pH was lowered below 6.5, a second, slower phase became apparent. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate, above pH 8, the kinetics of oxygen binding was of a single phase. As the pH was lowered, a transition to a second, slower phase was noticed. Below pH 7, the slower phase was the only detectable one. The analysis of the relative contribution of the faster phase to the total reaction as a function of the pH showed a typical transition curve characterized by a pK = 7.5 and a Hill parameter n = 2.9. On this basis, it is concluded that human adult stripped methemoglobin resides in an R quarternary structure, while the presence of IHP stabilizes the T structure at pH below 7.5. This transition between the quaternary structures of methemoglobin cannot be accounted for by the switch between the high spin and the low spin states of the ferric iron. This switch of spin state takes place at pH greater than 8.2.  相似文献   

9.
Stabilization of the T-state of hemoglobin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effect of inositol hexaphosphate and bezafibrate on binding of O2 and CO to HbAO at high concentrations (1 mM) has been evaluated using thin layer optical techniques. Data analysis shows 1) the occurrence of greatly reduced ligand dependent cooperativity (Hill slope of 2.23 for CO and 1.51 for O2), and 2) the presence of significant triply ligated species. The data fits a nested allosteric two-state MWC model in which the T state consists of two allosteric substrates, Tt and Tr, where Tt binds only to the alpha chains and Tr binds to both alpha and beta chains. The model indicates that the triply ligated species consists of a predominant amount of T form, agreeing with kinetic observations of CO ligated hemoglobin. The maximum amount of triply ligated R molecules (CO or O2) implicated is less than 1%, a result similar to that found previously for binding studies made in the absence of BZF and IHP.  相似文献   

10.
The allosteric transition in triply ferric hemoglobin has been studied with different ferric ligands. This valency hybrid permits observation of oxygen or CO binding properties to the single ferrous subunit, whereas the liganded state of the other three ferric subunits can be varied. The ferric hemoglobin (Hb) tetramer in the absence of effectors is generally in the high oxygen affinity (R) state; addition of inositol hexaphosphate induces a transition towards the deoxy (T) conformation. The fraction of T-state formed depends on the ferric ligand and is correlated with the spin state of the ferric iron complexes. High-spin ferric ligands such as water or fluoride show the most T-state, whereas low-spin ligands such as cyanide show the least. The oxygen equilibrium data and kinetics of CO recombination indicate that the allosteric equilibrium can be treated in a fashion analogous to the two-state model. The binding of a low-spin ferric ligand induces a change in the allosteric equilibrium towards the R-state by about a factor of 150 (at pH 6.5), similar to that of the ferrous ligands oxygen or CO; however, each high-spin ferric ligand induces a T to R shift by a factor of 40.  相似文献   

11.
The alpha and beta subunits in Fe-Co hybrid hemoglobins differ in their rapid reactions with dioxygen and nitric oxide after dissociation by a 25-ns photoflash. The alpha subunits show little recombination on a scale of tens of nanoseconds, whereas the beta subunits show extensive recombination on this time sale. The alpha-beta difference is more marked with Fe than with Co and greater with dioxygen as ligand than with nitric oxide, but is clearly evident in all combinations of ligand and metal. Addition of inositol hexaphosphate slows ligand binding and reduces the proportion of rapid recombination of dioxygen and nitric oxide to beta-Fe subunits. The behavior of alpha-Fe subunits is unaffected by this compound. These results permit the beta subunit to be identified as the T-state species which equilibrates rapidly with oxygen in the T-state, i.e. the reverse of the identification suggested on structural grounds.  相似文献   

12.
L J Parkhurst  D J Goss 《Biochemistry》1984,23(10):2180-2186
Oxygen and CO ligand binding kinetics have been studied for the hybrid hemoglobin (Hb) alpha (human):beta (carp), hybrid II. Valency and half-saturated hybrids were used to aid in the assignment of the conformations of both chains. In hybrid II, an intermediate S state occurs, in which one chain has R- and the other T-state properties. In HbCO at pH 6 (plus 1 mM inositol hexaphosphate), the human alpha-chain is R state and the carp beta-chain is T state. We have no evidence at this pH that the carp beta-chain ever assumes the R conformation. At pH 6, the human alpha-chain shows human Hb R-state kinetics at low fractional photolysis and T-state rates for CO ligation by stopped flow. At pH 7, the human-chain R-state rate slows toward a carp hemoglobin rate. The carp beta-chains, on the other hand, react 50% more rapidly in the liganded conformation than in carp hemoglobin, and while the human alpha-chains are in the R state, the two beta-chains appear to function as a cooperative dimer. In this hemoglobin, the chains appear to be somewhat decoupled near pH 7, allowing a sequential conformational change from the R state in which the beta-chains first assume T-state properties, followed by the alpha-chains. The rate of the R-T conformational change for the carp beta-chains is at least 300 times greater than that for the human alpha-chains. At pH 9, the R----T conformational transition rate is at least 200 times slower than that for human hemoglobin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of geminate recombination for the diliganded species alpha 2CO beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2CO of human hemoglobin were studied using flash photolysis. The unstable diliganded species were generated just before photolysis by chemical reduction in a continuous flow reactor from the more stable valency hybrids alpha 2CO beta 2+ and alpha 2+ beta 2CO, which could be prepared by high pressure liquid chromatography. Before the flash photolysis studies, the hybrids had been characterized by double-mixing stopped-flow kinetics experiments. At pH 6.0 in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) both of the diliganded species show second order kinetics for overall addition of a third CO that is clearly characteristic of the T state (l' = 1-2 x 10(5) M-1 s-1), whereas at higher pH and in the absence of IHP they show combination rates characteristic of an R state. The kinetics of geminate recombination following photolysis of a bound CO, however, showed little dependence on pH and IHP concentration. This surprising observation is explained on the basis that the kinetics of geminate recombination of CO primarily depends on the tertiary structure of the ligand binding site, which apparently does not differ much between the R state and the liganded T state formed on adding IHP in this system. Since this explanation requires distinguishing different tertiary structures within a particular quaternary structure, it amounts to a contradiction to the two-state allosteric model.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The properties of three HbA variants with different mutations at the beta102 position, betaN102Q, betaN102T, and betaN102A, have been examined. All three are inhibited in their ligand-linked transition from the low affinity T quaternary state to the high affinity Re quaternary state. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate, IHP, none of them exhibits cooperativity in the binding of oxygen. This is consistent with the destabilization of the Re state as a result of the disruption of the hydrogen bond that normally forms between the beta102 asparagine residue and the alpha94 aspartate residue in the Re state. However, these three substitutions also alter the properties of the T state of the hemoglobin tetramer. In the presence of IHP, the first two substitutions result in large increases in the ligand affinities of the beta-subunits within the T state structure. The betaN102A variant, however, greatly reduces the pH dependencies of the affinities of the alpha and beta subunits, K1(alpha) and K1(beta), respectively, for the binding of the first oxygen molecule in the absence of IHP. In the presence of IHP, the T state of this variant is strikingly similar to that of HbA under the same conditions. For both hemoglobins, K1(alpha) and K1(beta) exhibit only small Bohr effects. In the absence of IHP, the affinities of the alpha and beta subunits of HbA for the first oxygen are increased, and both exhibit greatly increased Bohr effects. However, in contrast to the behavior of HbA, the ligand-binding properties of the T state tetramer of the betaN102A variant are little affected by the addition or removal of IHP. It appears that along with its effect on the stability of the liganded Re state, this mutation has an effect on the T state that mimics the effect of adding IHP to HbA. It inhibits the set of conformational changes, which are coupled to the K1 Bohr effects and normally accompany the binding of the first ligand to the HbA tetramer in the absence of organic phosphates.  相似文献   

16.
Mixtures of nitric oxide and hemoglobin were prepared in a rapid freeze apparatus and analyzed by EPR spectroscopy. Spectra from samples at various degrees of saturation showed that the two subunits bound NO at equal rates. Identical results were observed in 0.1 M phosphate at pH 6.5 and 0.1 M 2,2'-bis(hydroxymethyl)-2,2',2'-nitrilotriethanol, 0.1 M NaCl at pH 7.0, both in the presence and absence of inositol hexaphosphate at either buffer condition. At subsaturating levels of NO (less than 60%), or at all levels of saturation in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate, it was found that the EPR spectrum of nitrosylhemoglobin varied with the length of time before freezing. This change was characterized by the development of a hyperfine structure at g = 2.01 which appeared with a half-time of approximately 0.4 s. Maxwell and Caughey (Maxwell, J. C., and Caughey, W. S. (1976) Biochemistry 15, 388-395) have attributed this three-line EPR hyperfine structure to the formation of a pentacoordinate ferroheme-NO complex. Corresponding slow changes were observed in the visible absorption spectrum following the binding of low levels of NO to deoxyhemoglobin or inositol hexaphosphate to fully saturated nitrosylhemoglobin. Thus it appears that NO binding to the alpha and beta subunits of deoxyhemoglobin takes place at equal rates and, under conditions favoring the T quaternary state (low saturation, presence of inositol hexaphosphate), a further slow structural change takes place, resulting in the cleavage of the iron--proximal histidine bond.  相似文献   

17.
Rapid reduction of cyano-met hemoglobin (Hb+CN-) leads to the formation of an intermediate species, the cyanide derivative of ferrous hemoglobin, which dissociates to unliganded hemoglobin because of the extremely low affinity of the ligand for the ferrous heme iron. The properties of the intermediate were studied by transient spectroscopy in human hemoglobin and its isolated alpha and beta chains, in the presence and absence of CO. When mixing with dithionite, the time courses of reduction of the heme iron and dissociation of cyanide overlap considerably; addition to the reaction mixture of the redox indicator methyl viologen considerably increases the rate of reduction and allows unequivocal determination of the spectroscopic and kinetic properties of the intermediate. The results show that (i) the dissociation of cyanide from the isolated alpha and beta chains (as well as the (alpha CO)2(beta + CN-)2 hybrid) is a simple process; (ii) the two chains display similar rate parameters, but show spectroscopic inequivalence, both in the Soret and the visible regions; (iii) cooperative effects are shown to control the rate of dissociation of cyanide from hemoglobin, similarly to what happens for oxygen; and (iv) allosteric effectors (typically inositol hexaphosphate) increase the overall rate of dissociation by stabilization of the T state. We have, therefore, shown for the first time that the dissociation of cyanide from ferrous hemoglobin is controlled by the quaternary state, thereby adding one more ligand to the analysis of the structure-function relationships in hemoglobin.  相似文献   

18.
The aggregation of deoxyhemoglobin dimers was studied by dropping the pH of a dilute solution of deoxyhemoglobin originally at high pH. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate, a sharp increase in the rate of dimer association was observed. At higher concentrations of the phosphate, the rate decreased to a value close to that seen in the absence of phosphate. These observations require that inositol hexaphosphate binds to deoxyhemoglobin dimers. The dependence of the aggregation rate on phosphate concentration occurs because the reaction of a dimer containing bound phosphate with a phosphate-free dimer is 30 to 50 times faster than either the association of phosphate-free dimers or the association of dimers both containing bound phosphate.  相似文献   

19.
The association kinetics of CO binding to site-directed mutants of human deoxyhemoglobin were measured by stopped-flow rapid mixing techniques at pH 7.0, 20 degrees C. Hemoglobin tetramers were constructed from one set of native subunits and one set of mutated partners containing His(E7) to Gly, Val(E11) to Ala, or Val(E11) to Ile substitutions. The reactivity of beta Cys93 with p-hydroxymercuribenzoate was measured to ensure that the mutant deoxyhemoglobins were capable of forming T-state quaternary conformations. Time courses for the complete binding of CO were measured by mixing the deoxygenated proteins with a 5-fold excess of ligand in the absence and presence of inositol hexaphosphate. Association rate constants for the individual alpha and beta subunits in the T-state conformation were assigned by measuring time courses for the reaction of a small, limiting amount of CO with a 20-fold excess of deoxyhemoglobin (i.e. Hb4 + CO----Hb4(CO)). The effects of the E7 and E11 mutations in T-state alpha subunits were qualitatively similar to those observed for the same subunit in the R-state (Mathews, A.J., Rohlfs, R.J., Olson, J.S., Tame, J., Renaud, J-P., and Nagai, K. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 16573-16583). The alpha His58(E7) to Gly and Val62(E11) to Ala substitutions caused 80- and 3-fold increases, respectively, in k'CO for T-state alpha subunits, and the alpha Val62(E11) to Ile mutation caused a 3-fold decrease. The beta His63(E7) to Gly and Val67(E11) to Ala substitutions produced 70- and 8-fold increases, respectively, in k'CO for T-state beta subunits whereas these same mutations caused little effect on the rate of CO binding to R-state beta subunits. The beta Val67(E11) to Ile mutation produced the same large effect, a 23-fold reduction in k'CO, in both quaternary conformations of beta subunits. These kinetic results can be interpreted qualitatively in terms of differences between the alpha and beta subunits in the deoxy and liganded crystal structures of human hemoglobin (Perutz, M.F. (1990) Annu. Rev. Physiol. 52, 1-25). Both the structural and functional data suggest that the distal portion of the beta heme pocket is tightly packed in deoxyhemoglobin whereas the CO binding site in R-state beta subunits is much more open. In contrast, the distal portion of the alpha heme pocket is restricted sterically in both quaternary states.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
A set of variant human hemoglobins, each with an Ala or Gly substitution at a single residue, has been prepared, and the kinetics of their reactions with carbon monoxide have been measured. This reaction is rate-limited by the binding of the first CO to the deoxygenated T state of the protein. The magnitudes of the effects of the mutations on CO combination vary widely, and, with the exception of beta Y145, the residues with the most significant effects on these kinetics are found in the hinge region of the alpha 1 beta 2 interface. Mixed-metal hybrids, with zinc protoporphyrin IX in place of heme on both alpha or both beta subunits, were prepared for beta W37E, beta W37A, alpha Y140G, and alpha Y140A, hinge region variants causing large kinetic changes, and for beta Y145G. Such hybrids permit measurements of the kinetics of CO binding to only the heme-containing alpha or beta subunits within the unliganded hemoglobin tetramer. Mutations at beta 37 and alpha 140 have global effects on the T state, increasing the rates of CO binding to both types of subunits. Mutation of beta Y145 has a large effect on the beta subunits in the deoxygenated T state, but very little effect on the alpha subunits. Oxygen equilibria measurements on the crystalline T state of beta W37E also indicate large affinity increases in both subunits of this variant. The overall oxygen equilibria of the variant hemoglobins in solution are sensitive to numerous variables besides the properties of the deoxygenated T state. In contrast to CO combination kinetics, the residues whose alterations cause the largest changes in overall oxygen equilibria in solution are scattered seemingly randomly within the alpha 1 beta 2 interface.  相似文献   

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