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1.
High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and nuclear Overhauser effects for the low-field exchangeable proton resonances of human normal adult hemoglobin in aqueous solvents are being used to confirm and extend the assignments of these resonances to specific protons at the intersubunit interfaces of the molecule. Most of these exchangeable proton resonances of human normal adult hemoglobin have been found to be absent in the spectra of isolated alpha or beta subunits. This finding indicates that they are specific spectral markers for the quaternary structure of the hemoglobin tetramer. Based on the nuclear Overhauser effect results, we have assigned the exchangeable proton resonance at +7.4 ppm downfield from H2O to the hydrogen-bonded proton between alpha 103(G10)His and beta 108(G10)Asn at the alpha 1 beta 1 interface. The nuclear Overhauser effect results have also confirmed the assignments of the exchangeable proton resonances at +9.4 and +8.2 ppm downfield from H2O previously proposed by workers in this laboratory based on a comparison of human normal adult hemoglobin and appropriate mutant hemoglobins. This independent confirmation of previously proposed assignments is necessary in view of the possible long-range conformational effects of single amino-acid substitutions in mutant hemoglobin molecules.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
NMR was used to study the quaternary structure of nitrosyl- and methemoglobin, the kinetics and equilibrium behavior of nitric oxide binding, and the oxidation of hemoglobin. The -9.6 ppm (from H2O) resonance was used as a measure of nitrosylhemoglobin molecules in the T quaternary structure. We found that stripped nitrosylhemoglobin is 70% in the T state below pH 6.4, and is in the R state above. Inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) raises this transition point to pH 7.5. For stripped aquomethemoglobin, the T marker at -10 ppm is absent. In IHP, at pH 6.5 all of the molecules are in the T state. At both higher and lower pH they shift to the R state. The intensity decreases to half of its maximum at pH 5.5 and 7.4. The relative affinity of nitric oxide binding to the alpha and beta subunits was inferred from the intensities of the resonances at -12 and -18 ppm. Under conditions in which nitrosylhemoglobin exists in the T state, NO binds to the alpha subunit 10 times more strongly than it does to the beta subunit. The kinetic experiments reveal that it binds to the two subunits at the same rate and that it dissociates at 5 x 10(-3) s-1 from the beta subunit and at 5 x 10(-4) s-1 from alpha subunit. At high pH, the two subunits are ligated at the same rate. Potassium ferricyanide oxidation, at pH 6.0 in the absence of IHP, is about 3 times more favorable for the alpha than the beta subunit. Addition of IHP raises this preferential oxidation slightly. At pH 8.44, both alpha and beta subunits were oxidized at the same rate.  相似文献   

5.
Ni(II)-Fe(II) hybrid hemoglobins, alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ni)2 and alpha(Ni)2 beta(Fe)2 have been characterized by proton nuclear magnetic resonance with Ni(II) protoporphyrin IX (Ni-PP) incorporated in apoprotein, which serves as a permanent deoxyheme. alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ni)2, alpha(Ni)2 beta(Fe)2, and NiHb commonly show exchangeable proton resonances at 11 and 14 ppm, due to hydrogen-bonded protons in a deoxy-like structure. Upon binding of carbon monoxide (CO) to alpha(Fe)2 beta(Ni)2, these resonances disappear at pH 6.5 to pH 8.5. On the other hand, the complementary hybrid alpha(Ni)2 beta(Fe-CO)2 showed the 11 and 14 ppm resonances at low pH. Upon raising pH, the intensities of both resonances are reduced, although these changes are not synchronized. Electronic absorption spectra and hyperfine-shifted proton resonances indicate that the ligation of CO in the beta(Fe) subunits induced changes in the coordination and spin states of Ni-PP in the alpha subunits. In a deoxy-like structure, the coordination of Ni-PP in the alpha subunits is predominantly in a low-spin (S = 0) four-coordination state, whereas in an oxy-like structure the contribution of a high-spin (S = 1) five-coordination state markedly increased. Ni-PP in the beta subunits always takes a high-spin five-coordination state regardless of solution conditions and the state of ligation in the partner alpha(Fe) subunits. In the beta(Ni) subunits, a significant downfield shift of the proximal histidyl N delta H resonance and a change in the absorption spectrum of Ni-PP were detected, upon changing the quaternary structure of the hybrid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Proton NMR spectra for nitrosyl-, aquomet- and deoxy des-Arg(α141)-hemoglobin in H2O were studied at high pressures up to 1400 atm with attention to the exchangeable proton resonances due to the intra- and intersubunit hydrogen bonds. For aquomethemoglboin, the T state marker signal at 6.4 ppm is insensitive to pressure while the R state marker signal at 6.0 ppm exhibits progressive upfield shift upon pressurization. For nitrosylhemoglobin, the T state signals at 9.6 and 6.5 ppm decrease their intensities upon pressurization while the R state marker signal at 6.0ppm remains unchanged. Pressure-induced spectral changes for some of exchangeable resonances are also encountered for deoxy des-Arg(α141)-hemoglobin while the R and T quaternary structural indicators at 6.0 and 9.4 ppm are insensitive to pressure. These pressure-induced spectral changes for these hemoglobin derivatives are significantly distinguished from those associated with the R-T transition induced by addition of IHP or by variatiuon of pH. It is therefore concluded that pressure induces subtle quaternary structural changes in these hemoglobin derivatives without causing the R-T transition.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
C H Tsai  T J Shen  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1999,38(27):8751-8761
Using our Escherichia coli expression system, we have produced five mutant recombinant (r) hemoglobins (Hbs): r Hb (alpha V96 W), r Hb Presbyterian (beta N108K), r Hb Yoshizuka (beta N108D), r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108K), and r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108D). These r Hbs allow us to investigate the effect on the structure-function relationship of Hb of replacing beta 108Asn by either a positively charged Lys or a negatively charged Asp as well as the effect of replacing alpha 96Val by a bulky, nonpolar Trp. We have conducted oxygen-binding studies to investigate the effect of several allosteric effectors on the oxygenation properties and the Bohr effects of these r Hbs. The oxygen affinity of these mutants is lower than that of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A) under various experimental conditions. The oxygen affinity of r Hb Yoshizuka is insensitive to changes in chloride concentration, whereas the oxygen affinity of r Hb Presbyterian exhibits a pronounced chloride effect. r Hb Presbyterian has the largest Bohr effect, followed by Hb A, r Hb (alpha V96W), and r Hb Yoshizuka. Thus, the amino acid substitution in the central cavity that increases the net positive charge enhances the Bohr effect. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies demonstrate that these r Hbs can switch from the R quaternary structure to the T quaternary structure without changing their ligation states upon the addition of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate, and/or by reducing the temperature. r Hb (alpha V96W, beta N108K), which has the lowest oxygen affinity among the hemoglobins studied, has the greatest tendency to switch to the T quaternary structure. The following conclusions can be derived from our results: First, if we can stabilize the deoxy (T) quaternary structure of a hemoglobin molecule without perturbing its oxy (R) quaternary structure, we will have a hemoglobin with low oxygen affinity and high cooperativity. Second, an alteration of the charge distribution by amino acid substitutions in the alpha 1 beta 1 subunit interface and in the central cavity of the hemoglobin molecule can influence the Bohr effect. Third, an amino acid substitution in the alpha 1 beta 1 subunit interface can affect both the oxygen affinity and cooperativity of the oxygenation process. There is communication between the alpha 1 beta 1 and alpha 1 beta 2 subunit interfaces during the oxygenation process. Fourth, there is considerable cooperativity in the oxygenation process in the T-state of the hemoglobin molecule.  相似文献   

9.
Fang TY  Simplaceanu V  Tsai CH  Ho NT  Ho C 《Biochemistry》2000,39(45):13708-13718
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to construct three recombinant mutant hemoglobins (rHbs), rHb(beta L105W), rHb(alpha D94A/betaL105W), and rHb(alpha D94A). rHb(beta L105W) is designed to form a new hydrogen bond from beta 105Trp to alpha 94Asp in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface to lower the oxygen binding affinity by stabilizing the deoxy quaternary structure. We have found that rHb(beta L105W) does indeed possess a very low oxygen affinity and maintains normal cooperativity (P(50) = 28.2 mmHg, n(max) = 2.6 in 0.1 M sodium phosphate at pH 7.4) compared to those of Hb A (P(50) = 9.9 mmHg, n(max) = 3.2 at pH 7.4). rHb(alpha D94A/beta L105W) and rHb(alpha D94A) are expressed to provide evidence that rHb(betaL 105W) does form a new H-bond from beta 105Trp to alpha 94Asp in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface of the deoxy quaternary structure. Our multinuclear, multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies on (15)N-labeled rHb(beta L105W) have identified the indole nitrogen-attached (1)H resonance of beta 105Trp for rHb(beta L105W). (1)H NMR studies on Hb A and mutant rHbs have been used to investigate the structural basis for the low O(2) affinity of rHb(beta L105W). Our NMR results provide evidence that rHb(beta L105W) forms a new H-bond from beta 105Trp to alpha 94Asp in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interface of the deoxy quaternary structure. The NMR results also show that these three rHbs can switch from the R quaternary structure to the T quaternary structure in their ligated state upon addition of an allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate. We propose that the low O(2) affinity of rHb(beta L105W) is due to the formation of a new H-bond between alpha 105Trp and alpha 94Asp in the deoxy quaternary structure.  相似文献   

10.
31P-NMR of trimethylphosphine binding to the ferrous chains of a ([alpha Fe(II), beta Mn(II)]hemoglobin hybrid is employed to investigate partially liganded species. This study shows that at low pH (6.5), in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate, the resonance at 23.2 ppm (from H3PO4) is due to phosphine bonding to alpha-chains in the T quaternary state. At elevated pH (7.6), phosphine binding to the alpha-chains produces a resonance at 24.8 ppm which is associated with a T-to-R conversion. These findings are discussed in relation with our previous results on direct observation of intermediate ligation states of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The abnormal human hemoglobin Malm? (beta97FG4 His leads to Gln) has been studied and its properties are compared with those of normal adult hemoglobin A. The data presented here show that the ring-current shifted proton resonances of both HbCO and HbO2 Malm? are very different from the corresponding forms of Hb A. The hyperfine shifted proton resonances of deoxy-Hb Malm? do not differ drastically from those of deoxy-Hb A. This result, together with the finding that the exchangeable proton resonances of the deoxy form of the two hemoglobins are similar, suggests that unliganded Hb Malm? can assume a deoxy-like quaternary structure both in the absence and presence of organic phosphates We have also compared the properties of Hb Malm? with those of Hb Chesapeake (alpha92FG4 Arg leads to Leu). This allows us to study the properties of two abnormal human hemoglobins with mutations at homologous positions of the alpha and beta chains in the three-dimenstional structure of the hemoglobin molecule. Our present results suggest that the mutaion at betaFG4 has its greatest effect on the teritiary structure of the heme pocket of the liganded forms of the hemoglobin while the mutation at alphaFG4 alters the deoxy structure of the hemoglogin molecule but does not alter the teriary structure of the heme pockets of the liganded form of the hemoglobin molecule. Both hemoglobins undergo a transition from the deoxy (T) to the oxy (R) quaternary structure upon ligation. The abnormally high oxygen affinities and low cooperativities of these two hemoglobins must therefore be due to either the structural differences which we have observed and/or to an altered transition between the T and R structures.  相似文献   

13.
K Ishimori  I Morishima 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4892-4898
The effect of heme modification on the tertiary and quaternary structures of hemoglobins was examined by utilizing the NMR spectra of the reconstituted [mesohemoglobin (mesoHb), deuterohemoglobin (deuteroHb)] and hybrid heme (meso-proto, deutero-proto) hemoglobins (Hbs). The heme peripheral modification resulted in the preferential downfield shift of the proximal histidine N1H signal for the beta subunit, indicating nonequivalence of the structural change induced by the heme modification in the alpha and beta subunits of Hb. In the reconstituted and hybrid heme Hbs, the exchangeable proton resonances due to the intra- and intersubunit hydrogen bonds, which have been used as the oxy and deoxy quaternary structural probes, were shifted by 0.2-0.3 ppm from that of native Hb upon the beta-heme substitution. This suggests that, in the fully deoxygenated form, the quaternary structure of the reconstituted Hbs is in an "imperfect" T state in which the hydrogen bonds located at the subunit interface are slightly distorted by the conformational change of the beta subunit. Moreover, the two heme orientations are found in the alpha subunit of deuteroHb, but not in the beta subunit of deuteroHb, and in both the alpha and beta subunits of mesoHb. The tertiary and quaternary structural changes in the Hb molecule induced by the heme peripheral modification were also discussed in relation to their functional properties.  相似文献   

14.
The intrinsic fluorescence of hemoglobins is known to respond to ligand-induced changes in the quaternary structure of the protein. Carp hemoglobin is an interesting model to study the quaternary transition since its R----T equilibrium is pH-dependent and at low pH, in the presence of organic phosphate, it remains in the T or 'deoxy' quaternary structure, even when saturated with ligand. In this study, using front-face fluorometry, we show that the intrinsic fluorescence intensity exhibited by carp carboxyhemoglobin increases as the pH is lowered below 6.5 in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate. At low pH, carp methemoglobin is less affected by the addition of inositol hexaphosphate than is the CO derivative, while little or no change is observed in the met-azide derivative. We conclude: (1) the exact nature of the R to T state transition induced by inositol hexaphosphate differs for carp carboxy-, met- and met-azide hemoglobin derivatives; (2) the chromophores responsible for the changes observed with absorption spectroscopy may not be the same as those chromophores responsible for the fluorescence differences; and (3) alpha 46-Trp is tentatively assigned as one source of fluorescence emission. Furthermore, fluorescence properties of carp hemoglobin are compared to those of human hemoglobin.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of pressure on the tertiary and quaternary structures of human oxy, carbonmonoxy, and deoxyhemoglobin was examined by high pressure NMR spectroscopy at 300 MHz. The increased pressure displaced the ring current-shifted gamma 1-methyl resonance of beta E11 valine for oxy- and carbonmonoxyhemoglobin to the upfield side, whereas that of the alpha subunit was insensitive to pressure. Such a preferential pressure-induced upfield shift for the beta E11 valine gamma 1-methyl signal was also encountered for the isolated carbonmonoxy beta chain. For deoxyhemoglobin, hyperfine shifted resonances of the heme peripheral proton groups and the proximal histidyl NH proton for the beta subunit were pressure-dependent, in contrast to the pressure-insensitive responses for these resonances of the alpha subunit. These results indicate the structural nonequivalence of the pressure-induced structural changes in the alpha and beta subunits of hemoglobin. The exchangeable proton resonances due to the intra- and intersubunit hydrogen bonds which have been used as the oxy and deoxy quaternary structural probes were not changed upon pressurization. From all of above results, it was concluded that pressure induces the tertiary structural change preferentially at the beta heme pocket of the ferrous hemoglobin derivatives with the quaternary structure retained.  相似文献   

16.
Three recombinant mutant hemoglobins (rHbs) of human normal adult hemoglobin (Hb A), rHb (alphaT67V), rHb (betaS72A), and rHb (alphaT67V, betaS72A), have been constructed to test the role of the tertiary intra-subunit H-bonds between alpha67T and alpha14W and between beta72S and beta15W in the cooperative oxygenation of Hb A. Oxygen-binding studies in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer at 29 degrees C show that rHb (alphaT67V), rHb (betaS72A), and rHb (alphaT67V, betaS72A) exhibit oxygen-binding properties similar to those of Hb A. The binding of oxygen to these rHbs is highly cooperative, with a Hill coefficient of approximately 2.8, compared to approximately 3.1 for Hb A. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies show that rHb (alphaT67V), rHb (betaS72A), rHb (alphaT67V, betaS72A), and Hb A have similar quaternary structures in the alpha(1)beta(2) subunit interfaces. In particular, the inter-subunit H-bonds between alpha42Tyr and beta99Asp and between beta37Trp and alpha94Asp are maintained in the mutants in the deoxy form. There are slight perturbations in the distal heme pocket region of the alpha- and beta-chains in the mutants. A comparison of the exchangeable 1H resonances of Hb A with those of these three rHbs suggests that alpha67T and beta72S are H-bonded to alpha14W and beta15W, respectively, in the CO and deoxy forms of Hb A. The absence of significant free energy changes for the oxygenation process of these three rHbs compared to those of Hb A, even though the inter-helical H-bonds are abolished, indicates that these two sets of H-bonds are of comparable strength in the ligated and unligated forms of Hb A. Thus, the mutations at alphaT67V and betaS72A do not affect the overall energetics of the oxygenation process. The preserved cooperativity in the binding of oxygen to these three mutants also implies that there are multiple interactions involved in the oxygenation process of Hb A.  相似文献   

17.
Binding of trimethylphosphine to myoglobins and hemoglobins from a variety of sources has been examined by 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance. The hemoglobins exhibit two resonances at high field (approx. -3.5 ppm) which have been assigned to PMe3 bound to alpha or to beta subunits. Perturbations in the beta heme pocket induced by a thiol reagent have been detected both in 1H and 31P spectra.  相似文献   

18.
Hemoglobin Saint Mandé (beta N102Y) is a low-affinity mutant with the substitution site situated in the quaternary-sensitive alpha 1 beta 2 interface. In adult hemoglobin the Asn102 beta contributes to the stability of the liganded (R) state, forming a hydrogen bond with Asp94 alpha. The quaternary and tertiary perturbations subsequent to the Tyr for Asn substitution in monocarboxylated hemoglobin Saint Mandé have been investigated by one- and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Analysis of the one-dimensional NMR spectra of the liganded and unliganded samples in 1H2O provides evidence that both R and T quaternary structures of Hb Saint Mandé are different from the corresponding ones in HbA. In the monocarboxylated form of the mutant hemoglobin, at acid pH, we have observed the disappearance of an R-type hydrogen bond and the appearance of a new one whose proton resonates like a deoxy T marker. Using two-dimensional NMR methods and on the basis of previous results on the monocarboxylated HbA, we have obtained a significant number of resonance assignments in the spectra of monocarboxylated Hb Saint Mandé at pH 5.6 in the presence or absence of a strong allosteric effector, inositol hexaphosphate. This enabled us to characterize the tertiary conformational changes (relative to the liganded normal hemoglobin) triggered by the quaternary-state modification. The observed structural variations are confined within the heme pocket regions but concern both the alpha and beta subunits. Most of them, localized in the C, F, G, and FG segments, could result directly from the side-chain substitution, while others, such as Leu141 beta, could be explained only by long-range interactions.  相似文献   

19.
The principal component of normal adult human hemoglobin Ao, was equilibrated under various conditions with 13CO2. In addition, derivatives containing specifically carbamylated NH2-terinal groups in alpha or beta chains, or both, were prepared by treatment with cyanate, and equilibrated likewise to allow the identification of specific resonances observed by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance. In deoxyhemoglobin, a resonanance at 29.2 ppm upfield of external CS2 was assigned to the alpha chain terminal adduct, and one at 29.8 ppm to the beta chain terminal adduct. In the liganded state as the CO derivative, the terminal adduct on both chains showed a common resonance position at 29.8 ppm. Small effects of pH on the resonance positions were observed. Under certain conditions, a resonance was observed at 33.4 ppm, probably not ascribable to a carbamino compound. A carbamino resonance that became prominent at higher pH was found at 28.4 ppm, and is tentatively ascribed to one or more adducts on epsilon amino groups. The beta chain resonances in particular are minimized by the presence of inositol hexaphosphate or 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. Quantitative analysis of the resonance intensities shows that the effects of conversion from the deoxy to the liganded state in reducing the degree of carbamino adduct is much more pronounced for the beta than for the alpha chains.  相似文献   

20.
The spectral changes of nitrosyl hemoglobin on addition of inositol hexaphosphate were studied in hybrid-heme hemoglobins. The results showed that the decrease in absorption in the Soret region was mainly due to a spectral change in alpha chains, and that the tension on heme in the quaternary T structure was much stronger in alpha than in beta chains.  相似文献   

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