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1.
It is still unclear whether the paradoxical arteriovenous carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) difference found in critical illness is due to increased COHb production by the lung, or whether this gradient is caused by technical artifacts using spectrophotometry. In healthy and matched endotoxemic sheep, blood gases were analyzed with a standard ABL 625 and the updated version, an ABL 725. The latter one was accurately calibrated for COHb wavelengths (SAT 100) to eliminate the FCOHb dependency on oxygen tension. All endotoxemic sheep exhibited a hypotensive-hyperdynamic circulation and a pulmonary hypertension. Interestingly, arteriovenous COHb difference occurred in both healthy and endotoxemic sheep (P<0.001 each). Arterial and central venous COHb concentrations determined with the ABL 625 were significantly lower than those measured with the ABL 725 (P<0.001 each). We conclude that (a) arteriovenous COHb difference per se does not reflect critical illness and (b) measurements with an ABL 625 underestimate COHb concentrations.  相似文献   

2.
Carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) formation is triggered by the inducible isoform of heme oxygenase (HO-1) catalyzing carbon monoxide (CO) production through breakdown of heme molecules, exposure to CO or both. In the setting of CO poisoning, COHb is regarded as a reliable marker characterizing both severity of injury and efficacy of treatment strategies. This study was designed as a prospective laboratory experiment to elucidate potential interdependencies between COHb generation, oxygenation, and pulmonary shunt fraction (Qs/Qt) in an ovine model of smoke inhalation injury. Chronically instrumented ewes (n=15) were repeatedly subjected to cotton smoke (4 x 12 breaths) according to an established protocol. This approach resulted in a progressive increase in COHb formation that was interrelated with the degree of Qs/Qt (P<0.001) and inversely correlated with both arterial and mixed venous HbO(2) saturation (r=-0.96 and -0.93). Although the arteriovenous COHb gradient successively decreased over time, COHb determined in venous blood underestimated the arterial content.  相似文献   

3.
Pulmonary enzyme heme oxygenase, which catalyses carbon monoxide production, may be responsible for arteriovenous carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) differences measured in humans. Unspecific inflammatory stimuli have been shown to induce pulmonary heme oxygenase possibly leading to increased pulmonary carbon monoxide production and elevated arterial COHb. Arteriovenous COHb gradients may therefore be a measurable parameter of lung injury severity. To exclude a technical artefact, we repeated measurements of central venous COHb and arterial COHb in healthy humans (ASA I-II) undergoing elective surgery with the ABL 625 and the updated version, ABL 725 (Radiometer, Copenhagen). In addition to the standard calibration, an especially accurate adjustment of the spectrophotometer wavelengths (SAT100) was performed. This adjustment eliminates the FCOHb dependency on the oxygen saturation. No significant differences were detectable between central venous and arterial COHb concentrations with either blood gas analyzer. The difference between central venous COHb and arterial COHb was 0.09 with the ABL 625 and -0.03 with the ABL 725. Therefore, we conclude that previously reported arteriovenous COHb differences are artifactual and may be eliminated by SAT 100 adjustment, as is possible with the ABL 725.  相似文献   

4.
Factors which govern transnitrosation reactions between hemoglobin (Hb) and low molecular weight thiols may define the extent to which S-nitrosated Hb (SNO-Hb) plays a role in NO in the control of blood pressure and other NO-dependent reactions. We show that exposure to S-nitrosylated cysteine (CysNO) produces equivalent levels of SNO-Hb for Hb A(0) and sickle cell Hb (Hb S), although these proteins differ significantly in the electron affinity of their heme groups as measured by their anaerobic redox potentials. Dolphin Hb, a cooperative Hb with a redox potential like that of Hb S, produces less SNO-Hb, indicating that steric considerations outweigh effects of altered electron affinity at the active-site heme groups in control of SNO-Hb formation. Examination of oxygen binding at 5-20 mM heme concentrations revealed increases due to S-nitrosation in the apparent oxygen affinity of both Hb A(0) and Hb S, similar to increases seen at lower heme concentrations. As observed at lower heme levels, deoxygenation is not sufficient to trigger release of NO from SNO-Hb. A sharp increase in apparent oxygen affinity occurs for unmodified Hb S at concentrations above 12.5 mM, its minimum gelling concentration. This affinity increase still occurs in 30 and 60% S-nitrosated samples, but at higher heme concentration. This oxygen binding behavior is accompanied by decreased gel formation of the deoxygenated protein. S-nitrosation is thus shown to have an effect similar to that reported for other SH-group modifications of Hb S, in which R-state stabilization opposes Hb S aggregation.  相似文献   

5.
Crystallographic studies of the intermediate states between unliganded and fully liganded hemoglobin (Hb) have revealed a large range of subtle but functionally important structural differences. Only one T state has been reported, whereas three other quaternary states (the R state, B state, and R2 or Y state) for liganded Hb have been characterized; other studies have defined liganded Hbs that are intermediate between the T and R states. The high-salt crystal structure of bovine carbonmonoxy (CO bovine) Hb has been determined at a resolution of 2.1 A and is described here. A detailed comparison with other crystallographically solved Hb forms (T, R, R2 or Y) shows that the quaternary structure of CO bovine Hb closely resembles R state Hb. However, our analysis of these structures has identified several important differences between CO bovine Hb and R state Hb. Compared with the R state structures, the beta-subunit N-terminal region has shifted closer to the central water cavity in CO bovine Hb. In addition, both the alpha- and beta-subunits in CO bovine Hb have more constrained heme environments that appear to be intermediate between the T and R states. Moreover, the distal pocket of the beta-subunit heme in CO bovine Hb shows significantly closer interaction between the bound CO ligand and the Hb distal residues Val 63(E11) and His 63(E7). The constrained heme groups and the increased steric contact involving the CO ligand and the distal heme residues relative to human Hb may explain in part the low intrinsic oxygen affinity of bovine Hb.  相似文献   

6.
We undertook this project to clarify whether hemoglobin (Hb) dimers have a high affinity for oxygen and cooperativity. For this, we prepared stable Hb dimers by introducing the mutation Trp-->Glu at beta37 using our Escherichia coli expression system at the alpha1beta2 interface of Hb, and analyzed their molecular properties. The mutant hybrid Hbs with a single oxygen binding site were prepared by substituting Mg(II) protoporphyrin for ferrous heme in either the alpha or beta subunit, and the oxygen binding properties of the free dimers were investigated. Molecular weight determination of both the deoxy and CO forms showed all these molecules to be dimers in the absence of IHP at different protein concentrations. Oxygen equilibrium measurements showed high affinity and non-cooperative oxygen binding for all mutant Hb and hybrid Hb dimers. However, EPR results on the [alpha(N)(Fe-NO)beta(M)(Mg)] hybrid showed some alpha1beta1 interactions. These results provide some clues as to the properties of Hb dimers, which have not been studied extensively owing to practical difficulties in their preparation.  相似文献   

7.
We have combined two extreme effects which influence the oxygen affinity to obtain a cobalt-based oxygen carrier with an affinity similar to that of human adult hemoglobin (HbA). The goal was to obtain an oxygen transporter with a lower oxidation rate. Exchange of the heme group (Fe-protoporphyrin IX) in Hb with a cobalt-porphyrin leads to a reduction in oxygen affinity by over a factor of 10, an oxygen affinity too low for use as a blood substitute. At the other extreme, certain globin sequences are known to provide a very high oxygen affinity; for example, Hb Ascaris displays an oxygen affinity 1000 times higher than HbA. We demonstrate here that these opposing effects can be additive, yielding an oxygen affinity similar to that of HbA, but with oxygen binding to a cobalt atom. We have tested the effect of substitution of cobalt-porphyrin for heme in normal HbA, sperm whale (SW) Mb (Mb), and high affinity globins for leghemoglobin, two trematode Hbs: Paramphistomum epiclitum (Pe) and Gastrothylax crumenifer (Gc). As for HbA or SW Mb, the transition from heme to cobalt-porphyrin in the trematode Hbs leads to a large decrease in the oxygen affinity, with oxygen partial pressures for half saturation (P(50)) of 5 and 25 mm Hg at 37 degrees C for cobalt-Pe and cobalt-Gc, respectively. A critical parameter for Hb-based blood substitutes is the autoxidation rate; while both metals oxidize to an inactive state, we observed a decrease in the oxidation rate of over an order of magnitude for cobalt versus iron, for similar oxygen affinities. The time constants for autoxidation at 37 degrees C were 250 and 100 h for Pe and Gc, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
The physicochemical properties of giant hemoglobin (Hb) of the marine polychaete Perinereis aibuhitensis were extensively studied and the following results were obtained. (1) Light absorption spectra of the oxy, deoxy, CO, met, and cyanomet derivatives were similar to those for human Hb, except for a somewhat peculiar shape and pH-dependence of the met derivative, and high absorbance values around 277 nm for all these derivatives of Perinereis Hb. Abnormal pH dependence for the met derivative was confirmed by powder electron parmagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, which revealed that a water molecule does not coordinate to the heme iron as a sixth ligand. The high absorption around 277 nm is indicative of the existence of some non-heme polypeptide chains and/or a high content of aromatic residues in the molecule. (2) UV difference and derivative spectra revealed oxygenation-induced conformational changes in the protein moiety that are related to the degree of cooperativity. (3) The EPR spectrum for the nitrosyl derivative showed well-resolved triplet-triplet splittings due to 14N, indicating that the proximal residue is probably a histidine. (4) The oxygen affinity and cooperativity of this Hb were pH-dependent. Mg2+ markedly increased the oxygen affinity, the Bohr effect, and the cooperativity, which was maximal at physiological pH. CO2 and anions such as 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and inositol hexaphosphate had no effect on the oxygenation properties. Thus, different from vertebrate Hb, the oxygen-binding properties of this Hb are regulated by divalent cations which bind preferentially to the oxy form. The low temperature-dependence of oxygen affinity observed for this Hb is a sign of adaptation to the environment by this poikilothermic organism. (5) By using a graphic method, the minimal functional unit that preserves the full cooperativity (allosteric unit) was inferred to be the one containing 6 heme groups and its significance is discussed in connection with the structural hierarchy of the molecule.  相似文献   

9.
The unicellular protozoan Paramecium caudatum contains a monomeric hemoglobin (Hb) that has only 116 amino acid residues. This Hb shares the simultaneous presence of a distal E7 glutamine and a B10 tyrosine with several invertebrate Hbs. In the study presented here, we have used ligand binding kinetics and resonance Raman spectroscopy to characterize the effect of the distal pocket residues of Paramecium Hb in stabilizing the heme-bound ligands. In the ferric state, the high-spin to low-spin (aquo-hydroxy) transition takes place with a pK(a) of approximately 9.0. The oxygen affinity (P(50) = 0.45 Torr) is similar to that of myoglobin. The oxygen on- and off-rates are also similar to those of sperm whale myoglobin. Resonance Raman data suggest hydrogen bonding stabilization of bound oxygen, evidenced by a relatively low frequency of Fe-OO stretching (563 cm(-1)). We propose that the oxy complex is an equilibrium mixture of a hydrogen-bonded closed structure and an open structure. Oxygen will dissociate preferentially from the open structure, and therefore, the fraction of open structure population controls the rate of oxygen dissociation. In the CO complex, the Fe-CO stretching frequency at 493 cm(-1) suggests an open heme pocket, which is consistent with the higher on- and off-rates for CO relative to those in myoglobin. A high rate of ligand binding is also consistent with the observation of an Fe-histidine stretching frequency at 220 cm(-1), indicating the absence of significant proximal strain. We postulate that the function of Paramecium Hb is to supply oxygen for cellular oxidative processes.  相似文献   

10.
M Nagai  Y Yoneyama  T Kitagawa 《Biochemistry》1991,30(26):6495-6503
To clarify the role of the proximal histidine (F8-His), distal His (E7-His), and E11 valine (E11-Val) in ligand binding of hemoglobin (Hb), we have investigated the resonance Raman (RR) spectra of the carbon monoxide adduct of Hbs M (COHb M) in which one of these residues was genetically replaced by another amino acid in either the alpha or beta subunit. In the fully reduced state, all Hbs M gave v3 at approximately 1472 cm-1 and vFe-His at 214-218 cm-1, indicating that they have a pentacoordinate heme and the heme iron is bound to either E7-His or F8-His. The porphyrin skeletal vibrations of the COHb M were essentially unaltered by replacements of E7- or F8-His with tyrosine (Tyr) and of E11-Val by glutamic acid (Glu). The vCO, vFe-CO, and delta Fe-C-O frequencies of COHb M Iwate (alpha F8-His----Tyr), COHb M Hyde Park (beta F8-His----Tyr), and COHb M Milwaukee (beta E11-Val----Glu) were nearly identical with those of COHb A. In contrast, the RR spectra of COHb M Boston (alpha E7-His----Tyr) and COHb M Saskatoon (beta E7-His----Tyr) gave two new Raman bands derived from the abnormal subunits, vFe-CO at 490 cm-1 and vCO at 1972 cm-1, in addition to those from the normal subunits at 505 cm-1 (vFe-CO) and 1952 cm-1 (vCO). The CO adduct of the abnormal subunits exhibited apparently no photodissociation upon illumination of CW laser with a stationary cell under which the normal subunit exhibited complete photodissociation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Hb Chico is an unusual human hemoglobin variant that has lowered oxygen affinity, but unaltered cooperativity and anion sensitivity. Previous studies showed these features to be associated with distal-side heme pocket alterations that confer increased structural rigidity on the molecule and that increase water content in the beta-chain heme pocket. We report here that the extent of nanosecond geminate rebinding of oxygen to the variant and its isolated beta-chains is appreciably decreased. Structural alterations in this variant decrease its oxygen recombination rates without significantly altering rates of migration out of the heme pocket. Data analysis indicates that one or more barriers that impede rebinding of oxygen from docking sites in the heme pocket are increased, with less consequence for CO rebinding. Resonance Raman spectra show no significant alterations in spectral regions sensitive to interactions between the heme iron and the proximal histidine residue, confirming that the functional differences in the variant are due to distal-side heme pocket alterations. These effects are discussed in the context of a schematic representation of heme pocket wells and barriers that could aid the design of novel hemoglobins with altered ligand affinity without loss of the normal allosteric responses that facilitate unloading of oxygen to respiring tissues.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Hu T  Li D  Manjula BN  Acharya SA 《Biochemistry》2008,47(41):10981-10990
The PEGylated hemoglobin (Hb) has been evaluated as a potential blood substitute. In an attempt to understand the autoxidation of the PEGylated Hb, we have studied the autoxidation of the PEGylated Hb site-specifically modified at Cys-93(beta) or at Val-1(beta). PEGylation of Hb at Cys-93(beta) perturbed the heme environment and increased the autoxidation rate of Hb, which is at a higher level than that caused by PEGylation at Val-1(beta). The perturbation of the heme environment of Hb is attributed to the maleimide modification at Cys-93(beta) and not due to conjugation of the PEG chains. However, the PEG chains enhance the autoxidation and the H 2O 2 mediated oxidation of Hb. Accordingly, the PEG chains are assumed to increase the water molecules in the hydration layer of Hb and enhance the autoxidation by promoting the nucleophilic attack of heme. The autoxidation rate of the PEGylated Hb does not show an inverse correlation with the oxygen affinity. The H 2O 2 mediated structural loss and the heme loss of Hb are increased by maleimide modification at Cys-93(beta) and further decreased by conjugation of the PEG chains. The autoxidation of the PEGylated Hbs is attenuated significantly in the plasma, possibly due to the presence of the antioxidant species in the plasma. This result is consistent with the recent suggestion that there is no direct correlation between the in vitro and in vivo autoxidation of the PEGylated Hb. Therefore, the pattern of PEGylation can be manipulated for the design of the PEGylated Hb with minimal autoxidation.  相似文献   

14.
Hb Calais [β 76 (E20) Ala → Pro] is a new human hemoglobin variant displaying a decreased oxygen affinity. The only electrophoretical difference with Hb A was a slight more acidic isoelectric point. A 2-fold decrease in the oxygen affinity was found by equilibrium measurements performed in a suspension of intact red blood cells and in the lysate. It was confirmed by kinetic studies of the purified abnormal hemoglobin. The rte of methamoglobin formation at 37°C of Hb Calais was also increased realtive to Hb A. The mechanism by which the Pro for Ala substitution of an external residue in the β-chains results in these profound functional abnormalities is nuclear. Subtle changes at the heme pocket, at a distance from teh mutation, may be a plausible explanation for the effects observed.  相似文献   

15.
In Hb Warsaw Val replaces the Phe normally present at the heme contact position beta 42 (CD1). This variant is unstable, and it readily undergoes methemoglobin formation. In DEAE-cellulose chromatography, the variant hemoglobin co-eluted with Hb A; a partially heme-depleted fraction of the variant, representing 5-6% of the total hemoglobin, eluted separately and in pure form. The heme replete form of Hb Warsaw exhibited decreased oxygen affinity with a normal Bohr effect and normal cooperativity and interaction with 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (DPG). The heme-depleted Hb Warsaw had a higher oxygen affinity than that of Hb A, decreased cooperativity and 2,3-DPG interaction, and a very low alkaline Bohr effect. Gel filtration of the heme-depleted form showed it to exist entirely as alpha beta dimers. Globin chain synthesis by Hb Warsaw-containing reticulocytes followed a balanced alpha/beta ratio. In short-term synthesis experiments, a major portion of incorporated radiolabeled L-leucine was recovered from the dimeric, heme-depleted Hb Warsaw fraction, suggesting that subunit association precedes the incorporation of heme into the beta subunits in the post-synthetic assembly of this hemoglobin. Structural analysis of deoxyhemoglobin containing roughly equal proportions of normal and variant beta chains showed that the replacement leaves a cavity next to the heme that is large enough to hold a water molecule, which may account for the instability of Hb Warsaw. The heme and the pyrrol nearest to ValCD1 tilt into the cavity. The resulting increase in the tilt of the proximal histidine relative to the heme plane, coupled with a possible stretching of the Fe-N epsilon bond may account for the low oxygen affinity.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies showed that CO/H2O oxidation provides electrons to drive the reduction of oxidized hemoglobin (metHb). We report here that Cu(II) addition accelerates the rate of metHb beta chain reduction by CO by a factor of about 1000. A mechanism whereby electron transfer occurs via an internal pathway coupling CO/H2O oxidation to Fe(III) and Cu(II) reduction is suggested by the observation that the copper-induced rate enhancement is inhibited by blocking Cys-beta93 with N-ethylmaleimide. Furthermore, this internal electron-transfer pathway is more readily established at low Cu(II) concentrations in Hb Deer Lodge (beta2His --> Arg) and other species lacking His-beta2 than in Hb A0. This difference is consistent with preferential binding of Cu(II) in Hb A0 to a high affinity site involving His-beta2, which is ineffective in promoting electron exchange between Cu(II) and the beta heme iron. Effective electron transfer is thus affected by Hb type but is not governed by the R left arrow over right arrow T conformational equilibrium. The beta hemes in Cu(II)-metHb are reduced under CO at rates close to those observed for cytochrome c oxidase, where heme and copper are present together in the oxygen-binding site and where internal electron transfer also occurs.  相似文献   

17.
Hemoglobin (Hb) Chico (Lys beta 66----Thr at E10) has a diminished oxygen affinity (Shih, D. T.-b., Jones, R. T., Shih, M. F.-C., Jones, M. B., Koler, R. D., and Howard, J. (1987) Hemoglobin 11, 453-464). Our studies show that its P50 is about twice that of Hb A and that its cooperativity, anion, and Bohr effects between pH 7 and 8 are normal. The Bohr effect above pH 8 is somewhat reduced, indicating a small but previously undocumented involvement of the ionic bond formed by Lys beta 66 in the alkaline Bohr effect. Since the oxygen affinity of the alpha-hemes is likely to be normal, that of the beta-hemes in the tetramer is likely to be reduced by the equivalent of 1.2 kcal/mol beta-heme in binding energy. Remarkably, both initial and final stages of oxygen binding to Hb Chico are of lowered affinity relative to Hb A under all conditions examined. The isolated beta chains also show diminished oxygen affinity. In T-state Hb A, Lys(E10 beta) forms a salt bridge with one of the heme propionates, but comparison with other hemoglobin variants shows that rupture of this bridge cannot be the cause of the low oxygen affinity. X-ray analysis of the deoxy structure has now shown that Thr beta 66 either donates a hydrogen bond to or accepts one from His beta 63 via a bridging water molecule. This introduces additional steric hindrance to ligand binding to the T-state that results in slower rates of ligand binding. We measured the O2/CO partition coefficient and the kinetics of oxygen dissociation and carbon monoxide binding and found that lowered O2 and CO affinity is also exhibited by the R-state tetramers and the isolated beta chains of Hb Chico.  相似文献   

18.
It is known that most of the oxygen-linked carbamate which is formed in normal adult human hemoglobin (Hb A) is confined to the beta subunits rather than to the alpha subunits. In order to find out if similar differences exist in the isolated protomers of Hb A we have measured the effect of various pressures of carbon dioxide (pCO2) on the oxygen affinity in the following heme pigments: isolated alpha and beta subunits with free --SH groups (alphaSH, betaSH), mercurated beta subunits (betaPMB), myoglobin (Mb), and betaSH/PLP in which the terminal alpha-amino group of betaSH was irreversibly blocked with pyridoxal phosphate (PLP). Similar measurements were done on Hb A and the fraction of oxygen-linked carbamate calculated from the effect of pCO2 (at constant pH) on the oxygen half-saturation pressure (p50). A distinct influence of CO2 on p50 was observed in betaSH which was absent in betaSH/PLP and thus indicates that the terminal alpha-amino group mediates the oxygen-linked binding of CO2 in betaSH as it does in the beta subunits of Hb A. However, the fraction of oxygen-linked carbamate was much less dependent on pH and pCO2 in betaSH than in Hb A. Neither alphaSH, betaPMB, or Mb, all of which are known to exist largely or wholly as monomers but have free terminal alpha-amino groups, showed a shift of p50 upon addition of CO2. As both betaSH and betaSH/PLP were shown to be tetrameric molecules, we conclude from this study that homotetramers composed of isolated beta subunits do exhibit a reciprocal interaction between the binding of O2 and CO2.  相似文献   

19.
Jin Y  Nagai M  Nagai Y  Nagatomo S  Kitagawa T 《Biochemistry》2004,43(26):8517-8527
The alpha-abnormal hemoglobin (Hb) M variants show physiological properties different from the beta-abnormal Hb M variants, that is, extremely low oxygen affinity of the normal subunit and extraordinary resistance to both enzymatic and chemical reduction of the abnormal met-subunit. To get insight into the contribution of heme structures to these differences among Hb M's, we examined the 406.7-nm excited resonance Raman (RR) spectra of five Hb M's in the frequency region from 1700 to 200 cm(-1). In the high-frequency region, profound differences between met-alpha and met-beta abnormal subunits were observed for the in-plane skeletal modes (the nu(C=C), nu(37), nu(2), nu(11), and nu(38) bands), probably reflecting different distortions of heme structure caused by the out-of-plane displacement of the heme iron due to tyrosine coordination. Below 900 cm(-1), Hb M Iwate [alpha(F8)His --> Tyr] exhibited a distinct spectral pattern for nu(15), gamma(11), delta(C(beta)C(a)C(b))(2,4), and delta(C(beta)C(c)C(d))(6,7) compared to that of Hb M Boston [alpha(E7)His --> Tyr], although both heme irons are coordinated by Tyr. The beta-abnormal Hb M variants, namely, Hb M Hyde Park [beta(F8)His --> Tyr], Hb M Saskatoon [beta(E7)His --> Tyr], and Hb M Milwaukee [beta(E11)Val --> Glu], displayed RR band patterns similar to that of metHb A, but with some minor individual differences. The RR bands characteristic of the met-subunits of Hb M's totally disappeared by chemical reduction, and the ferrous heme of abnormal subunits was no longer bonded with Tyr or Glu. They were bonded to the distal (E7) or proximal (F8) His, and this was confirmed by the presence of the nu(Fe-His) mode at 215 cm(-1) in the 441.6-nm excited RR spectra. A possible involvement of heme distortion in differences of reducibility of abnormal subunits and oxygen affinity of normal subunits is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Heme oxygenase (HO) is an essential, rate-limiting protein which catalyses the breakdown of heme to iron, carbon monoxide (CO), and biliverdin. The alpha methene bridge of the heme is eliminated as CO which can be measured as blood carboxyhaemoglobin (COHb). Using blood concentrations of COHb as a measure reflecting HO activity, we tested the postulate that the activity of HO changes with exercise. Ten healthy, nonsmoking volunteers (5 females and 5 males with a mean age?±?standard deviation of 25.7?±?3.2 years), lifetime nonsmokers with no history of respiratory diseases and not taking any medication, were included in the study. Subjects were exposed to filtered air for 2?hrs while alternating exercise for 15?minutes on a cycle ergometer with rest for 15?minutes. Workload was adjusted so that subjects breathed at a ventilatory rate, normalised for body surface area, of 25?L/m2/minute. Immediately before, immediately after, and the day following exercise, blood was drawn by standard venipuncture technique. COHb was determined using the interleukin (IL) 682 Co-Oximeter (Instrumentation Laboratory, Bedford, MA). COHb increased in each participant during the exercise session with the mean value (± standard deviation) almost doubling (1.1?±?1.6 to 2.1?±?1.6%) and returned to baseline by the following day (1.3?±?1.3%). We conclude that exercise increases HO activity.  相似文献   

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