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1.
M R Busch  J E Mace  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1991,30(7):1865-1877
Assessment of the roles of the carboxyl-terminal beta 146 histidyl residues in the alkaline Bohr effect in human normal adult hemoglobin by high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy requires assignment of the resonances corresponding to these residues. Previous resonance assignments in low ionic strength buffers for the beta 146 histidyl residue in the carbonmonoxy form of hemoglobin have been controversial [see Ho and Russu (1987) Biochemistry 26, 6299-6305; and references therein]. By a careful spectroscopic study of human normal adult hemoglobin, enzymatically prepared des(His146 beta)-hemoglobin, and the mutant hemoglobins Cowtown (beta 146His----Leu) and York (beta 146His----Pro), we have resolved some of these conflicting results. By a close incremental variation of pH over a wide range in chloride-free 0.1 M N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N'-2-ethanesulfonic acid buffer, a single resonance has been found to be consistently missing in the proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of these hemoglobin variants. The spectra of each of these variants show additional perturbations; therefore, the assignment has been confirmed by an incremental titration of buffer conditions to benchmark conditions, i.e., 0.2 M phosphate, where the assignment of this resonance is unambiguous. The strategy of incremental titration of buffer conditions also allows extension of this resonance assignment to spectra taken in 0.1 M [bis(2-hydroxyethyl)amino]tris(hydroxymethyl)methane buffer. Participation of the beta 146 histidyl residues in the Bohr effect has been calculated from the pK values determined for the assigned resonances in chloride-free 0.1 M N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N'-2-ethanesulfonic acid buffer. Our results indicate that the contribution of the beta 146 histidyl residues is 0.52 H+/hemoglobin tetramer at pH 7.6, markedly less than the 0.8 H+/hemoglobin tetramer estimated by study of the mutant hemoglobin Cowtown (beta 146His----Leu) by Shih and Perutz [(1987) J. Mol. Biol. 195, 419-422]. We have found that at least two histidyl residues in the carbonmonoxy form of this mutant have pK values that are perturbed, and we suggest that these pK differences may in part account for this discrepancy. Furthermore, summation of the positive contribution of the beta 146 histidyl residues and the negative contribution of the beta 2 histidyl residues to the maximum Bohr effect measured in 0.1 M N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N'-2-ethanesulfonic acid buffer suggests that additional sites in the hemoglobin molecule account for proton release upon ligation greater than the contribution of the beta 146 histidyl residues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
I M Russu  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1706-1716
The contribution of the carboxyl-terminal histidines of the beta chains, beta 146(HC3), to the alkaline Bohr effect of human normal adult hemoglobin has been shown by this laboratory to depend upon the solvent composition. Using high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we have found that the pKa value of the beta 146-histidine is 8.0 in the deoxy form, while in the carbonmonoxy form it ranges from 7.1 to 7.85 depending upon the concentration of inorganic phosphate and chloride ions present. These conclusions have been questioned by Perutz and co-workers on the basis of biochemical, structural, and proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of mutant and enzymatically or chemically modified hemoglobins [Perutz, M. F., Kilmartin, J. V., Nishikura, K., Fogg, J. H., Butler, P. J., & Rollema, H. S. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 138, 649-670; Kilmartin, J. V., Fogg, J. H., & Perutz, M. F. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 3189-3193; Perutz, M. F., Gronenborn, A. M., Clore, G. M., Fogg, J. H., & Shih, D. T.-b. (1985) J. Mol. Biol. 183, 491-498]. In this work, we use proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to assess the effects of structural modifications on the histidyl residues and on the overall conformation of the hemoglobin molecule in solution. The structural perturbations investigated all occur within the tertiary domains around the carboxyl-terminal region of the beta chain as follows: Hb Cowtown (beta 146His----Leu); Hb Wood (beta 97His----Leu); Hb Malm? (beta 97His----Gln); Hb Abruzzo (beta 143His----Arg). Our results demonstrate that the conformational effects of single-site structural modifications upon the conformation and dynamics of hemoglobin depend strongly on their location in the three-dimensional structure of the protein molecule and also on their chemical nature. Furthermore, in normal hemoglobin, the spectral properties of several surface histidyl residues are found to depend, in the ligated state, upon the nature of the ligand. Our present findings do not support the recent spectral assignments proposed by Perutz et al. (1985) for the proton resonances of the beta 146- and beta 97-histidines and their suggestion that the enzymatic removal of the carboxyl-terminal beta 146-histidyl residues induces a conformational equilibrium for the beta 97-histidines in the des-beta 146His hemoglobin molecule in the carbonmonoxy form.  相似文献   

3.
I M Russu  S S Wu  N T Ho  G W Kellogg  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1989,28(12):5298-5306
High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to investigate the molecular mechanism of the Bohr effect of human normal adult hemoglobin in the presence of two allosteric effectors, i.e., chloride and inorganic phosphate ions. The individual hydrogen ion equilibria of 22-26 histidyl residues of hemoglobin have been measured in anion-free 0.1 M HEPES buffer and in the presence of 0.18 M chloride or 0.1 M inorganic phosphate ions in both deoxy and carbonmonoxy forms. The results indicate that the beta 2-histidyl residues are strong binding sites for chloride and inorganic phosphate ions in hemoglobin. The affinity of the beta 2-histidyl residues for these anions is larger in the deoxy than in the carbonmonoxy form. Nevertheless, the contribution of these histidyl residues to the anion Bohr effect is small due to their low pK value in deoxyhemoglobin in anion-free solvents. The interactions of chloride and inorganic phosphate ions with the hemoglobin molecule also result in lower pK values and/or changes in the shapes of the hydrogen ion binding curves for several other surface histidyl residues. These results suggest that long-range electrostatic interactions between individual ionizable sites in hemoglobin could play an important role in the molecular mechanism of the anion Bohr effect.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
I M Russu  S S Wu  K A Bupp  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1990,29(15):3785-3792
High-resolution 1H and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to investigate the binding of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate to human normal adult hemoglobin and the molecular interactions involved in the allosteric effect of the 2,3-diphosphoglycerate molecule on hemoglobin. Individual hydrogen ion NMR titration curves have been obtained for 22-26 histidyl residues of hemoglobin and for each phosphate group of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate with hemoglobin in both the deoxy and carbonmonoxy forms. The results indicate that 2,3-diphosphoglycerate binds to deoxyhemoglobin at the central cavity between the two beta chains and the binding involves the beta 2-histidyl residues. Moreover, the results suggest that the binding site of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate to carbonmonoxyhemoglobin contains the same (or at least some of the same) amino acid residues responsible for binding in the deoxy form. As a result of the specific interactions with 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, the beta 2-histidyl residues make a significant contribution to the alkaline Bohr effect under these experimental conditions (up to 0.5 proton/Hb tetramer). 2,3-Diphosphoglycerate also affects the individual hydrogen ion equilibria of several histidyl residues located away from the binding site on the surface of the hemoglobin molecule, and, possibly, in the heme pockets. These results give the first experimental demonstration that long-range electrostatic and/or conformational effects of the binding could play an important role in the allosteric effect of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate on hemoglobin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Cheng Y  Shen TJ  Simplaceanu V  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2002,41(39):11901-11913
To investigate the roles of beta93 cysteine in human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A), we have constructed four recombinant mutant hemoglobins (rHbs), rHb (betaC93G), rHb (betaC93A), rHb (betaC93M), and rHb (betaC93L), and have prepared two chemically modified Hb As, Hb A-IAA and Hb A-NEM, in which the sulfhydryl group at beta93Cys is modified by sulfhydryl reagents, iodoacetamide (IAA) and N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), respectively. These variants at the beta93 position show higher oxygen affinity, lower cooperativity, and reduced Bohr effect relative to Hb A. The response of some of these Hb variants to allosteric effectors, 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG) and inositol hexaphosphate (IHP), is decreased relative to that of Hb A. The proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of these Hb variants show that there is a marked influence on the proximal heme pocket of the beta-chain, whereas the environment of the proximal heme pocket of the alpha-chain remains unchanged as compared to Hb A, suggesting that higher oxygen affinity is likely to be determined by the heme pocket of the beta-chain rather than by that of the alpha-chain. This is further supported by NO titration of these Hbs in the deoxy form. For Hb A, NO binds preferentially to the heme of the alpha-chain relative to that of the beta-chain. In contrast, the feature of preferential binding to the heme of the alpha-chain becomes weaker and even disappears for Hb variants with modifications at beta93Cys. The effects of IHP on these Hbs in the NO form are different from those on HbNO A, as characterized by (1)H NMR spectra of the T-state markers, the exchangeable resonances at 14 and 11 ppm, reflecting that these Hb variants have more stability in the R-state relative to Hb A, especially rHb (betaC93L) and Hb A-NEM in the NO form. The changes of the C2 proton resonances of the surface histidyl residues in these Hb variants in both the deoxy and CO forms, compared with those of Hb A, indicate that a mutation or chemical modification at beta93Cys can result in conformational changes involving several surface histidyl residues, e.g., beta146His and beta2His. The results obtained here offer strong evidence to show that the salt bridge between beta146His and beta94Asp and the binding pocket of allosteric effectors can be affected as the result of modifications at beta93Cys, which result in the destabilization of the T-state and a reduced response of these Hbs to allosteric effectors. We further propose that the impaired alkaline Bohr effect can be attributed to the effect on the contributions of several surface histidyl residues which are altered because of the environmental changes caused by mutations and chemical modifications at beta93Cys.  相似文献   

8.
The contribution of the interaction of chloride ions with deoxy and oxyhemoglobin to the Bohr effect can be described by a simple binding model. Applying this model to experiment data reveals that at physiological pH and ionic strength about half of the release of Bohr protons is due to a difference in chloride ion binding to deoxy- and oxyhemoglobin. The chloride-independent part of the Bohr effect corresponds with the shift in pK which His-146 beta shows upon oxygenation. The proton absorptioon by hemoglobin observed upon oxygenation below pH 6 is apparently due to a chloride-ion-induced proton uptake, which is larger for oxyhemoglobin than for deoxyhemoglobin. The analysis of the experimental data indicates the existence of only two oxygen-linked chloride ion binding sites in both deoxy and oxyhemoglobin. In deoxyhemoglobin the binding sites most likely consist of Val-1 alpha of one chain and Arg-141 alpha of the partner chain. The sites in oxyhemoglobin consist of groups with a pK value in the neutral pH range; they do not contain lysyl or arginyl residues.  相似文献   

9.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 250 MHz has been used to investigate the conformations of proximal histidyl residues of human normal adult hemoglobin, hemoglobin Kempsey [beta 99(G1) Asp leads to Asn], hemoglobin Osler [beta 145(HC2) Tyr leads to Asp], and hemoglobin McKees Rocks [beta 145(HC2) Tyr leads to Term] around neutral pH in H2O at 27 degrees C, all in the deoxy form. Two resonances that occur between 58 and 76 ppm downfield from the water proton signal have been assigned to the hyperfine shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable protons of the alpha- and beta-chains of deoxyhemoglobin. These two resonances are sensitive to the quaternary state of hemoglobin, amino acid substitutions in the alpha 1 beta 2-subunit interface and in the carboxy-terminal region of the beta-chain, and the addition of organic phosphates. The experimental results show that there are differences in the heme pockets among these four hemoglobins studied. The structural and dynamic information derived from the hyperfine shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable proton resonances complement that obtained from the ferrous hyperfine shifted and exchangeable proton resonances of deoxyhemoglobin over the spectral region from 5 to 20 ppm downfield from H2O. The relationship between these findings and Perutz's stereochemical mechanism for the cooperative oxygenation of hemoglobin 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.
The crystal structure of a high oxygen affinity species of hemoglobin, bar-headed goose hemoglobin in deoxy form, has been determined to a resolution of 2.8 A. The R and R(free) factor of the model are 0.197 and 0.243, respectively. The structure reported here is a special deoxy state of hemoglobin and indicates the differences in allosteric mechanisms between the goose and human hemoglobins. The quaternary structure of the goose deoxy hemoglobin shows obvious differences from that of human deoxy hemoglobin. The rotation angle of one alphabeta dimer relative to its partner in a tetramer molecule from the goose oxy to deoxy hemoglobin is only 4.6 degrees, and the translation is only 0.3 A, which are much smaller than those in human hemoglobin. In the alpha(1)beta(2) switch region of the goose deoxy hemoglobin, the imidazole ring of His beta(2)97 does not span the side-chain of Thr alpha(1)41 relative to the oxy hemoglobin as in human hemoglobin. And the tertiary structure changes of heme pocket and FG corner are also smaller than that in human hemoglobin. A unique mutation among avian and mammalian Hbs of alpha119 from proline to alanine at the alpha(1)beta(1 )interface in bar-headed goose hemoglobin brings a gap between Ala alpha119 and Leu beta55, the minimum distance between the two residues is 4.66 A. At the entrance to the central cavity around the molecular dyad, some residues of two beta chains form a positively charged groove where the inositol pentaphosphate binds to the hemoglobin. The His beta146 is at the inositol pentaphosphate binding site and the salt-bridge between His beta146 and Asp beta94 does not exist in the deoxy hemoglobin, which brings the weak chloride-independent Bohr effect to bar-headed goose hemoglobin.  相似文献   

12.
Hemoglobin Barcelona was discovered by routine electrophoresis in a Spanish family showing a mild polycythemia. Red blood cells of the propositus which contained 37% of the abnormal hemoglobin had an increased oxygen affinity and a lowered alkaline Bohr effect. After purification, functional studies of Hb2 Barcelona (pI = 7.11) demonstrated a twofold increase in oxygen affinity and a moderate reduction in heme-heme interaction compared to normal HbA. Its reaction towards anionic cofactors (Cl?, DPG or IHP) was similar to that of HbA. Reactivity of the sulphydryl groups (cysteine-β93) was increased in Hb Barcelona both in the deoxy and fully liganded forms, and in the absence as well as in the presence of IHP. By three different methods (the pH-dependence of log P50, the direct proton titration technique and the measurement of the ΔpIdeox-ox) by isoelectric focusing) all in the absence of phosphate ions, Hb Barcelona was found to have a 20 to 30% reduction of the alkaline Bohr effect. This was most pronounced in the alkaline pH range. The reduction was less than expected for the loss of the important intrachain salt-bridge Asp-β94 → His-β146 considered to be responsible for 40 to 60% of the whole T → R Bohr effect (Perutz et al., 1980). This suggested that in Hb Barcelona, His-β146 could be in weak electrostatic interaction with the neighboring Glu-β90 in the deoxy form. It is concluded that the presence of the oxygen-linked Asp-β94 → His-β146 salt-bridge in HbA is a prerequisite for the full expression of the alkaline Bohr effect and heme-heme interaction.  相似文献   

13.
S K Soni  L A Kiesow 《Biochemistry》1977,16(6):1165-1170
The transition from deoxy to oxystructure of hemoglobin A (Hb) is accompanied by the breaking of the salt bridges formed by C-terminal residues in deoxy-Hb. This, in turn, changes the state of the heme. The switch between these different allosteric forms can be followed by changes in the optical absorbance spectra (Perutz, M. F., Ladner, J. E., Simon, S. R., and Ho, C. (1974), Biochemistry 13, 2163). Using difference spectroscopy in the soret region, pH-dependent spectral changes of Hb and its derivatives (carbamylated at both the alpha-NH2 groups, alpha2cbeta2c; N-ethylsuccinimide hemoglobin, NES-Hb) in their deoxy and carbonmonoxy forms were measured. From these measurements, the pK values of histidine-146beta and valine-1alpha in deoxy-Hb were determined to be 8.6 +/- 0.2 and 7.7 +/- 0.1, respectively. In carbonmonoxy-Hb a pK value of 6.3 +/- 0.1 was found.  相似文献   

14.
The high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of carp hemoglobin have been compared to those of human normal adult hemoglobin. Carp deoxy and carbonmonoxy hemoglobins in the deoxy-type quaternary state exhibit two downfield exchangeable proton resonances as compared to four seen in human normal adult deoxyhemoglobin. This suggests that two of the hydrogen bonds present in human normal adult deoxyhemoglobin are absent or occur in very different environments in carp hemoglobin. One of the exchangeable proton resonances of carp hemoglobin, while present in the deoxy-type quaternary state of the carbonmonoxy and deoxy derivatives, is absent in the oxy-type quaternary state of both, in agreement with the assignments of these quaternary structures by other methods. The ring-current-shifted proton resonances (sensitive tertiary structural markers) of carp carbonmonoxyhemoglobin are substantially different from those of human normal adult hemoglobin. The aromatic proton resonance region of carp hemoglobin has fewer resonances than that of human normal adult hemoglobin, consistent with its much reduced histidine content. The hyperfine-shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable proton resonances of carp hemoglobin suggest that during the transition from the oxy to the deoxy quaternary structure, there is a greater alteration in the heme pocket of one type of subunits (presumably the beta chain) than that in the other subunit. The present results suggest that there are differences in both tertiary and quaternary structures between carp and human normal adult hemoglobins which could contribute to the great differences in the functional properties between these two proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The structures of carbonmonoxyhaemoglobins A and Cowtown (His146 beta----Leu) have been refined at 2.2 A (1 A = 0.1 nm) and 2.3 A resolution, respectively. The least squares fit to the Fe-C-O line makes an angle to the haem normal of about 6 degrees. The Fe-C-O group is bent from linearity by about 7 degrees. The porphyrins in the CO liganded haemoglobins are ruffled. This deformation of the haem and the distortion of the Fe-C-O group may explain the low CO affinity of haemoglobin. The electron density for the C-terminal residues is low but sufficient to distinguish the histidyl and leucyl residues clearly. The similarity between these two structures, apart from 146 beta, means that the reduced alkaline Bohr effect is due solely to the replacement of histidine by a leucine.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The cathodic hemoglobin component of the Antarctic fish Trematomus newnesi (HbCTn) is a Root-effect protein. The interpretation of its functional properties in relation to its sequence is puzzling. Indeed, HbCTn sequence is characterized by an extremely low histidyl content, and in particular by the lack of His146beta and His69beta, which are believed to be important in Bohr and Root effects, respectively. Furthermore, previous analyses suggested that the local environment of Asp95alpha, Asp99beta, and Asp101beta should not be appropriate for the formation of Asp-Asp interactions, which are important for the Root effect. Here, we report the high-resolution crystal structure of the deoxy form of HbCTn. Our data provide a structural interpretation for the very low oxygen affinity of the protein and insights into the structural determinants of the Root effect protein. The structure demonstrates that the presence of Ile41alpha and Ser97alpha at the alpha1beta2 interface does not prevent the formation of the inter-Asp interactions in HbCTn, as previous studies had suggested. The present data indicate that the hydrogen bond formed between Asp95alpha and Asp101beta, which is stabilized by Asp99beta, is per se sufficient to generate the Root effect, and it is the minimal structural requirement needed for the design of Root-effect Hbs.  相似文献   

18.
G Viggiano  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1979,18(23):5238-5247
The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of human adult deoxyhemoglobin in D2O in the region from 6 to 20 ppm downfield from the proton resonance of residual water shows a number of hyperfine shifted proton resonances that are due to groups on or near the alpha and beta hemes. The sensitivity of these resonances to the ligation of the heme groups and the assignment of these resonances to the alpha and beta chains provide an opportunity to investigate the cooperative oxygenation of an intact hemoglobin molecule in solution. By use of the nuclear magnetic resonance correlation spectroscopy technique, at least two resonances, one at approximately 18 ppm downfield from HDO due to the beta chain and the other at approximately 12 ppm due to the alpha chain, can be used to study the binding of oxygen to the alpha and beta chains of hemoglobin. The present results using approximately 12% hemoglobin concentration in 0.1 M Bistris buffer at pD 7 and 27 degrees C with and without organic phosphate show that there is no significant line broadening on oxygenation (from 0 to 50% saturation) to affect the determination of the intensities or areas of these resonances. It is found that the ratio of the intensity of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm to that of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm is constant on oxygenation in the absence of organic phosphate but decreases in the presence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate or inositol hexaphosphate, with the effect of the latter being the stronger. On oxygenation, the intensities of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm and of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm decreases more than the total number of deoxy chains available as measured by the degree of O2 saturation of hemoglobin. This shows the sensitivity of these resonances to structural changes which are believed to occur in the unligated subunits upon the ligation of their neighbors in an intact tetrameric hemoglobin molecule. A comparison of the nuclear magnetic resonance data with the populations of the partially saturated hemoglobin tetramers (i.e., hemoglobin with one, two, or three oxygen molecules bound) leads to the conclusion that in the presence of organic phosphate the hemoglobin molecule with one oxygen bound maintains the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm but not the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm. These resluts suggest that some cooperativity must exist in the deoxy quaternary structure of the hemoglobin molecule during the oxygenation process. Hence, these results are not consistent with the requirements of two-state concerted models for the oxygenation of hemoglobin. In addition, we have investigated the effect of D2O on the oxygenation of hemoglobin by measuring the oxygen dissociation curves of normal adult hemoglobin as a function of pH in D2O andH2O media. We have found that (1) the pH dependence of the oxygen equilibrium of hemoglobin (the Bohr effect) in higher pH in comparison to that in H2O medium and (2) the Hill coefficients are essentially the same in D2O and H2O media over the pH range from 6.0 to 8.2...  相似文献   

19.
To clarify the functional role of Tyr-42(C7) alpha, which forms a hydrogen bond with Asp-99(G1) beta at the alpha 1-beta 2 interface of human deoxyhaemoglobin, we engineered two artificial mutant haemoglobins (Hb), in which Tyr-42 alpha was replaced by Phe (Hb Phe-42 alpha) or His (Hb His-42 alpha), and investigated their oxygen binding properties together with structural consequences of the mutations by using various spectroscopic probes. Like most of the natural Asp-99 beta mutants, Hb Phe-42 alpha showed a markedly increased oxygen affinity, a reduced Bohr effect and diminished co-operativity. Structural probes such as ultraviolet-region derivative and oxy-minus-deoxy difference spectra, resonance Raman scattering and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra indicate that, in Hb Phe-42 alpha, the deoxy T quaternary structure is highly destabilized and the strain imposed on the Fe-N epsilon (proximal His) bond is released, stabilizing the oxy tertiary structure. In contrast with Hb Phe-42 alpha, Hb His-42 alpha showed an intermediately impaired function and only moderate destabilization of the T-state, which can be explained by the formation of a new, weak hydrogen bond between His-42 alpha and Asp-99 beta. Spectroscopic data were consistent with this assumption. The present study proves that the hydrogen bond between Tyr-42 alpha and Asp-99 beta plays a key role in stabilizing the deoxy T structure and consequently in co-operative oxygen binding.  相似文献   

20.
High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of deoxyhemoglobins Osler (beta145HC2 Tyr replaced by Asp) and McKees Rocks (beta 145HC2 Tyr replaced by term) indicate that these hemoglobins are predominately in the oxy quaternary structure in 0.1 M [bis(2-hydroxyethyl)imino]-tris(hydroxymethyl) methane buffer at pH 7. Upon the addition of inositol hexaphosphate, the proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of these hemoglobins become similar to those characteristic of a hemoglobin molecule in the deoxy quaternary structure. The exchangeable proton resonance which is found at -6.4 ppm from H2O in the spectrum of normal human adult deoxyhemoglobin is absent in the spectra of these two mutant hemoglobins. Consequently we believe the hydrogen bond between the hydroxyl group of tyrosine-beta145HC2 and the carboxyl oxygen of valine-beta98FG5 gives rise to this resonance. This assignment allows us to use the -6.4ppm resonance as an important tertiary structural probe in the investigation of the cooperative oxygenation of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

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