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1.
Previous studies point to the acidic amino-terminal segment of band 3, the anion transport protein of the red cell, as the common binding site for hemoglobin and several of the glycolytic enzymes to the erythrocyte membrane. We now report on the interaction of hemoglobin with the synthetic peptide AcM-E-E-L-Q-D-D-Y-E-D-E, corresponding to the first 11 residues of band 3, and with the entire 43,000-Da cytoplasmic domain of the protein. In the presence of increasing concentrations of the peptide, the oxygen binding curve for hemoglobin is shifted progressively to the right, indicating that the peptide binds preferentially to deoxyhemoglobin. The dissociation constant for the deoxyhemoglobin-peptide complex at pH 7.2 in the presence of 100 mM NaCl is 0.31 mM. X-ray crystallographic studies were carried out to determine the exact mode of binding of the peptide to deoxyhemoglobin. The difference electron density map of the deoxyhemoglobin-peptide complex at 5 A resolution showed that the binding site extends deep (approximately 18 A) into the central cavity between the beta chains, along the dyad symmetry axis, and includes Arg 104 beta 1 and Arg 104 beta 2 as well as most of the basic residues within the 2,3-diphosphoglycerate binding site. The peptide appears to have an extended conformation with only 5 to 7 of the 11 residues in contact with hemoglobin. In agreement with the crystallographic studies, binding of the peptide to deoxyhemoglobin was blocked by cross-linking the beta chains at the entrance to the central cavity. Oxygen equilibrium studies showed that the isolated cytoplasmic fragment of band 3 also binds preferentially to deoxyhemoglobin. The binding of the 43,000-Da fragment to hemoglobin was inhibited in the cross-linked derivative indicating that the acidic amino-terminal residues in the intact cytoplasmic domain also bind within the central cavity of the hemoglobin tetramer.  相似文献   

2.
Recent studies have suggested that nitric oxide (NO) binding to hemoglobin (Hb) may lead to the inhibition of sickle cell fiber formation and the dissolution of sickle cell fibers. NO can react with Hb in at least 3 ways: 1) formation of Hb(II)NO, 2) formation of methemoglobin, and 3) formation of S-nitrosohemoglobin, through nitrosylation of the beta93 Cys residue. In this study, the role of beta93 Cys in the mechanism of sickle cell fiber inhibition is investigated through chemical modification with N-ethylmaleimide. UV resonance Raman, FT-IR and electrospray ionization mass spectroscopic methods in conjunction with equilibrium solubility and kinetic studies are used to characterize the effect of beta93 Cys modification on Hb S fiber formation. Both FT-IR spectroscopy and electrospray mass spectrometry results demonstrate that modification can occur at both the beta93 and alpha104 Cys residues under relatively mild reaction conditions. Equilibrium solubility measurements reveal that singly-modified Hb at the beta93 position leads to increased amounts of fiber formation relative to unmodified or doubly-modified Hb S. Kinetic studies confirm that modification of only the beta93 residue leads to a faster onset of polymerization. UV resonance Raman results indicate that modification of the alpha104 residue in addition to the beta93 residue significantly perturbs the alpha(1)beta(2) interface, while modification of only beta93 does not. These results in conjunction with the equilibrium solubility and kinetic measurements are suggestive that modification of the alpha104 Cys residue and not the beta93 Cys residue leads to T-state destabilization and inhibition of fiber formation. These findings have implications for understanding the mechanism of NO binding to Hb and NO inhibition of Hb S fiber formation.  相似文献   

3.
A set of variant human hemoglobins, each with an Ala or Gly substitution at a single residue, has been prepared, and the kinetics of their reactions with carbon monoxide have been measured. This reaction is rate-limited by the binding of the first CO to the deoxygenated T state of the protein. The magnitudes of the effects of the mutations on CO combination vary widely, and, with the exception of beta Y145, the residues with the most significant effects on these kinetics are found in the hinge region of the alpha 1 beta 2 interface. Mixed-metal hybrids, with zinc protoporphyrin IX in place of heme on both alpha or both beta subunits, were prepared for beta W37E, beta W37A, alpha Y140G, and alpha Y140A, hinge region variants causing large kinetic changes, and for beta Y145G. Such hybrids permit measurements of the kinetics of CO binding to only the heme-containing alpha or beta subunits within the unliganded hemoglobin tetramer. Mutations at beta 37 and alpha 140 have global effects on the T state, increasing the rates of CO binding to both types of subunits. Mutation of beta Y145 has a large effect on the beta subunits in the deoxygenated T state, but very little effect on the alpha subunits. Oxygen equilibria measurements on the crystalline T state of beta W37E also indicate large affinity increases in both subunits of this variant. The overall oxygen equilibria of the variant hemoglobins in solution are sensitive to numerous variables besides the properties of the deoxygenated T state. In contrast to CO combination kinetics, the residues whose alterations cause the largest changes in overall oxygen equilibria in solution are scattered seemingly randomly within the alpha 1 beta 2 interface.  相似文献   

4.
A new hemoglobin variant, termed hemoglobin Athens-Georgia, has been found in a 23-year-old Caucasian student and three members of her family. The electrophoretic mobility of this variant at pH 9.0 is slightly less than that of hemoglobin-A. Arginyl residue in position 40 of the beta chain, corresponding to position 6 of the C helix, has been replaced by a lysyl residue. This amino acid substitution is at the alpha1-beta2 contact and slightly affects the oxygen binding properties of the hemoglobin molecule. Hemoglobin Athens-Georgia has an increased affinity for oxygen, a normal heme-heme interaction and a normal Bohr effect. Hematological abnormalities are not associated with this variant.  相似文献   

5.
The energetic changes that occur on ligand binding in human hemoglobin have been investigated by measurements of the exchange rates of the indole proton of Trpbeta37(C3). The Trpbeta37 residues are located in helices C of the beta-subunits and are involved in contacts with the segments FG of the alpha-subunits at the interdimeric alpha1beta2 and alpha2beta1 interfaces of the hemoglobin tetramer. In the quaternary structure change that accompanies ligand binding to hemoglobin, these contacts undergo minimal changes in relative orientation and in packing, thereby acting as hinges, or flexible joints. The exchange rates of the indole proton of Trpbeta37(C3) were measured by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, in both deoxygenated and ligated hemoglobin. The results indicate that, at 15 degrees C, the exchange rate is increased from 9.0. 10(-6) to 3.3. 10(-4) s(-1) upon ligand binding to hemoglobin. This change suggests that the structural units at the hinge regions of the alpha1beta2/alpha2beta1 interfaces containing Trpbeta37(C3) are specifically stabilized in unligated hemoglobin, and experience a change in structural free energy of approximately 4 kcal/(mol tetramer) upon ligand binding. Therefore, the hinge regions of the alpha1beta2/alpha2beta1 interfaces could play a role in the transmission of free energy through the hemoglobin molecule during its allosteric transition.  相似文献   

6.
Bis(3,5-dibromosalicyl) fumarate and a number of related bifunctional reagents react preferentially with oxyhemoglobin to cross-link the beta chains within the 2,3-diphosphoglycerate-binding site. In this report we describe a new derivative cross-linked between the alpha chains which is formed specifically in the reaction with deoxyhemoglobin. X-ray crystallographic studies show that the cross-link lies between Lys-99 alpha 1 and Lys-99 alpha 2, spanning the central cavity of the tetramer. Lys-99 alpha 1 and Lys-99 alpha 2 are located within a cluster of charged residues very near the middle of the hemoglobin molecule. In oxyhemoglobin, this site is completely inaccessible to the cross-linking agent. Competition experiments with inositol hexaphosphate indicate that the compound enters the central cavity in deoxyhemoglobin through the cleft between the alpha chains. Despite the presence of the cross-link between the alpha chains, the modified hemoglobin remains highly cooperative. The Hill coefficient for HbXL99 alpha is 2.6. The oxygen affinity of the cross-linked derivative is decreased by approximately 2-fold; at pH 7.0 in the presence of 0.1 M NaCl the P50 is 13.9 mm Hg compared to 6.6 mm Hg for HbA. This difference appears to be due to relatively small changes in both KR, the association constant for binding of oxygen to the R state, and the allosteric constant L. Surprisingly, the isoelectric point of oxyHbXL99 alpha is almost identical to that of oxyHbA, whereas in the deoxy form the isoelectric point of the cross-linked derivative is decreased relative to native hemoglobin as expected due to the loss of the two positive charges of the modified amino groups. In agreement with these findings, the alkaline Bohr effect of HbXL99 alpha is decreased by more than 50%. Earlier studies argue strongly against the possibility that Lys-99 alpha is directly responsible for this large fraction of the Bohr effect in HbA. Analysis of the structure suggests that in the cross-linked derivative Glu-101 beta, which is in close proximity to Lys-99 alpha in oxyhemoglobin, becomes an acid Bohr group.  相似文献   

7.
Hemoglobin Alberta has an amino acid substitution at position 101 (Glu----Gly), a residue involved in the alpha 1 beta 2 contact region of both the deoxy and oxy conformers of normal adult hemoglobin. Oxygen equilibrium measurements of stripped hemoglobin Alberta at 20 degrees C in the absence of phosphate revealed a high affinity (P50 = 0.75 mm Hg at pH 7), co-operative hemoglobin variant (n = 2.3 at pH 7) with a normal Bohr effect (- delta log P50/delta pH(7-8) = 0.65). The addition of inositol hexaphosphate resulted in a decrease in oxygen affinity (P50 = 8.2 mm Hg at pH 7), a slight increase in the value of n and an enhanced Bohr effect. Rapid mixing experiments reflected the equilibrium results. A rapid rate of carbon monoxide binding (l' = 7.0 X 10(5) M-1 S-1) and a slow rate of overall oxygen dissociation (k = 15 s-1) was seen at pH7 and 20 degrees C in the absence of phosphate. Under these experimental conditions the tetramer stability of liganded and unliganded hemoglobin Alberta was investigated by spectrophotometric kinetic techniques. The 4K4 value (the liganded tetramer-dimer equilibrium dissociation constant) for hemoglobin Alberta was found to be 0.83 X 10(-6) M compared to a 4K4 value for hemoglobin A of 2.3 X 10(-6) M, indicating that the Alberta tetramer was less dissociated into dimers than the tetramer of hemoglobin A. The values of 0K4 (the unliganded tetramer-dimer equilibrium dissociation constant) for hemoglobin Alberta and hemoglobin A were also measured and found to be 2.5 X 10(-8) M and 1.5 X 10(-10) M, respectively, demonstrating a greatly destabilized deoxyhemoglobin tetramer for hemoglobin Alberta compared to deoxyhemoglobin A. The functional and subunit dissociation properties of hemoglobin Alberta appear to be directly related to the dual role of the beta 101 residue in stabilizing the tetrameric form of the liganded structure, while concurrently destabilizing the unliganded tetramer molecule.  相似文献   

8.
The equilibria of oxygen binding to and kinetics of CO combination with the symmetrical iron-zinc hybrids of a series of variants of human adult hemoglobin A have been measured at pH 7 in the presence of inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). In addition, the kinetics of CO combination have also been measured in the absence of IHP. The hybrids have the heme groups of either the alpha or the beta subunits replaced by zinc protoporphyrin IX, which is unable to bind a ligand and is a good model for permanently deoxygenated heme. The variants examined involve residues located in the alpha1beta2 interface of the hemoglobin tetramer. Alterations of residues located in the hinge region of the interface are found to affect the properties of both the alpha and the beta subunits of the protein. In contrast, alterations of residues in the switch region of the interface have substantial effects only on the mutant subunit and are poorly communicated to the normal partner subunit. When the logarithms of the rate constants for the combination of the first CO molecule with a single subunit in the presence of IHP are analyzed as functions of the logarithms of the dissociation equilibrium constants for the binding of the first oxygen under the same conditions, a linear relationship is found. The relationship is somewhat different for the alpha and beta subunits, consistent with the well-known differences in the geometries of their ligand binding sites.  相似文献   

9.
The properties of three HbA variants with different mutations at the beta102 position, betaN102Q, betaN102T, and betaN102A, have been examined. All three are inhibited in their ligand-linked transition from the low affinity T quaternary state to the high affinity Re quaternary state. In the presence of inositol hexaphosphate, IHP, none of them exhibits cooperativity in the binding of oxygen. This is consistent with the destabilization of the Re state as a result of the disruption of the hydrogen bond that normally forms between the beta102 asparagine residue and the alpha94 aspartate residue in the Re state. However, these three substitutions also alter the properties of the T state of the hemoglobin tetramer. In the presence of IHP, the first two substitutions result in large increases in the ligand affinities of the beta-subunits within the T state structure. The betaN102A variant, however, greatly reduces the pH dependencies of the affinities of the alpha and beta subunits, K1(alpha) and K1(beta), respectively, for the binding of the first oxygen molecule in the absence of IHP. In the presence of IHP, the T state of this variant is strikingly similar to that of HbA under the same conditions. For both hemoglobins, K1(alpha) and K1(beta) exhibit only small Bohr effects. In the absence of IHP, the affinities of the alpha and beta subunits of HbA for the first oxygen are increased, and both exhibit greatly increased Bohr effects. However, in contrast to the behavior of HbA, the ligand-binding properties of the T state tetramer of the betaN102A variant are little affected by the addition or removal of IHP. It appears that along with its effect on the stability of the liganded Re state, this mutation has an effect on the T state that mimics the effect of adding IHP to HbA. It inhibits the set of conformational changes, which are coupled to the K1 Bohr effects and normally accompany the binding of the first ligand to the HbA tetramer in the absence of organic phosphates.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Hemoglobin tetramers which cannot split into alphabeta dimers, because they are covalently cross-linked between the beta chains across the polyphosphate binding site, form complexes with haptoglobin. The reaction is biphasic as measured by fluorescence quenching and peroxidase activity. A complex in which one of the alpha beta dimers of the cross-linked hemoglobin is bound to one of the sites in the divalent haptoglobin molecule, is formed reversibly during the initial fast phase. In the subsequent slower step, this product then either polymerizes, adds another cross-linked hemoglobin molecule or, in the presence of excess haptoglobin, combines with a second haptoglobin molecule. This latter complex, in which two haptoglobin molecules are bridged by a cross-linked hemoglobin tetramer, can still combine with normal alpha beta dimers at the vacant haptoglobin combining sites. In spite of the very low oxygen affinity of the cross-linked hemoglobin, combination with haptoglobin shifts if oxygen affinity to the very high value of the normal hemoglobin-haptoglobin complex.  相似文献   

12.
This review summarizes the most recent state of haemoglobin (Hb) research based on the literature and our own results. In particular, an attempt is made to form a unified picture for haemoglobin function by reconciling the cooperative oxygen binding with the stabilization of the bound dioxygen in aqueous solvent. The HbA molecule contains two types of alphabeta contacts. One type is the alpha1beta2 or alpha2beta1 contacts, called sliding contacts, and these are strongly associated with the cooperative binding of O2 to the alpha2beta2 tetramer. The other type is the alpha1beta1 or alpha2beta2 contacts, called packing contacts, but whose role in Hb function was not clear until quite recently. However, detailed pH-dependence studies of the autoxidation rate of HbO2 have revealed that the alpha1beta1 and alpha2beta2 interfaces are used for controlling the stability of the bound O2. When the alpha1beta1 or alpha2beta2 contact is formed, the beta chain is subjected to a conformational constraint which causes the distal (E7) histidine to be tilted slightly away from the bound dioxygen, preventing the proton-catalysed nucleophilic displacement of O2- from the FeO2 by an entering water molecule. This is one of the most characteristic features of HbO2 stability. Finally we discuss the role of the alpha1beta1 or alpha2beta2 contacts by providing some examples of unstable haemoglobin mutants. These pathological mutations are found mostly on the beta chain, especially in the alpha1beta1 contact regions. In this way, HbA seems to differentiate two types of alphabeta contacts for its functional properties.  相似文献   

13.
The iron(II)-dioxygen bond in myoglobin and hemoglobin is a subject of wide interest. Studies range from examinations of physical-chemical properties dependent on its electronic structure, to investigations of the stability as a function of oxygen supply. Among these, stability properties are of particular importance in vivo. Like all known dioxygen carriers synthesized so far with transition metals, the oxygenated forms of myoglobin and hemoglobin are known to be oxidized easily to their ferric met-forms, which cannot bind molecular oxygen and are therefore physiologically inactive. The mechanistic details of this autoxidation reaction, which are of clinical, as well as of physical-chemical, interest, have long been investigated by a number of authors, but a full understanding of the heme oxidation has not been reached so far. Recent kinetic and thermodynamic studies of the stability of oxymyoglobin (MbO2) and oxyhemoglobin (HbO2) have revealed new features in the FeO2 bonding. In vivo, the iron center is always subject to a nucleophilic attack of the water molecule or hydroxyl ion, which can enter the heme pocket from the surrounding solvent and thereby irreversibly displace the bound dioxygen from MbO2 or HbO2 in the form of O2- so that the iron is converted to the ferric met-form. Since the autoxidation reaction of MbO2 or HbO2 proceeds through a nucleophilic displacement following one-electron transfer from iron(II) to the bound O2, this reaction may be viewed as a meeting point of the stabilization and the activation of molecular oxygen performed by hemoproteins. Along with these lines of evidence, we finally discuss the stability property of human HbO2 and provide with the most recent state of hemoglobin research. The HbA molecule contains two types of alphabeta contacts and seems to differentiate them quite properly for its functional properties. The alpha1beta2 or alpha2beta1 contact is associated with the cooperative oxygen binding, whereas the alpha1beta1 or alpha2beta2 contact is used for controlling the stability of the bound O2. We can thus form a unified picture for hemoglobin function by closely integrating the cooperative and the stable binding of molecular oxygen with iron(II) in aqueous solvent. These new views on the nature of FeO2 bonding and the possible role of globin moiety in stabilizing MbO2 and HbO2 are of primary importance, not only for a full understanding of various hemoprotein reactions with O2, but also for planning new molecular designs for synthetic oxygen carriers which may be able to function in aqueous solvent and at physiological temperature.  相似文献   

14.
The proton-translocating pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase of Escherichia coli is composed of two types of subunits, alpha and beta, organized as an alpha(2)beta(2) tetramer. The protein contains three recognizable domains, of which domain II is the transmembrane region of the molecule containing the pathway for proton translocation. Domain II is composed of four transmembrane helices at the carboxyl-terminus of the alpha subunit and nine transmembrane helices at the amino-terminal region of the beta subunit. We have introduced pairs of cysteine residues into all of the loops connecting the transmembrane helices of domain II of the beta subunit. Crosslinking between the two beta subunits of the tetramer was induced spontaneously, or by treatment with cupric 1,10-phenanthrolinate or o-phenylenedimaleimide. Crosslinks between pairs of betaA114C, betaS183C, and betaA262C residues were observed, suggesting that pairs of domain II transmembrane helices 11, 12, and 14 were in proximity. These results, together with previous data (Bragg and Hou (2000) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 273, 955-959) suggest that the transhydrogenase tetramer is formed by apposition of alpha(2) and beta(2) dimers. Crosslinking between pairs of cysteine residues in the same beta subunit was not observed, possibly because the interhelical loops of the domain II region of the beta subunit were too short to allow correct orientation of the sulfhydryl groups for crosslinking.  相似文献   

15.
In hemoglobin (Hb) Roanne, the aspartate residue α 94(G1) is replaced by a glutamic acid. This residue plays a key role in the structural changes affecting the α1β2 contact area during the deoxy- to oxy-state transition in the hemoglobin molecule. Aspartate α94(G1) is involved in several contacts both in the deoxy- and oxy-structures. The most important of those is a hydrogen bond with asparagine β102 (G4), stabilizing the oxygenated structure. Alteration of this contact usually leads to a decrease in oxygen affinity. Hb Roanne is the first example in which an increased oxygen affinity was found as a result of a structural modification at this position. Functional data suggested that the mechanisms responsible for this altered property are a destabilisation of the T-structure and a modification of the allosteric equilibrium.  相似文献   

16.
Trivalent arsenicals have high affinity for thiols (such as free cysteines) in proteins. We describe here the use of this property to develop a collision-induced dissociation (CID) tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) technique for the identification of reactive cysteines in proteins. A trivalent arsenic species, dimethylarsinous acid (DMA (III)), with a residue mass (103.9607) and mass defect distinct from the normal 20 amino acids, was used to selectively label reactive cysteine residues in proteins. The CID fragment ions of the arsenic-labeled sequences shifted away from the more abundant normal fragments that would otherwise overlap with the ions of interest. Along with the internal and immonium ions, the arsenic-labeled fragment ions served as MS/MS signatures for identification of the binding sites and for assessment of the relative reactivity of individual cysteine residues in a protein. Using this method, we have identified two highly reactive binding sites in rat hemoglobin (Hb): Cys-13alpha and Cys-125beta. Cys-13alpha was bound to DMA (III) in the Hb of rats fed with arsenic, and this binding was responsible for arsenic accumulation in rat blood, while Cys-125beta was found to bind to glutathione in rat blood. This study revealed the relative reactivity of the cysteines in rat Hb in the following decreasing order: Cys-13alpha > Cys-111alpha > Cys-104alpha and Cys-13alpha > Cys-125beta > Cys-93beta. Arsenic-labeling is easy and fast for identification of active binding sites without enzymatic digestion and acid hydrolysis, and useful for characterization and identification of metal binding sites in other proteins.  相似文献   

17.
The heme-globin and dimer-tetramer equilibria of ferric recombinant human hemoglobins with site-specific beta chain mutations at the heme pocket or at either the a1beta1 or the alpha1beta2 interfaces have been determined. The heme pocket mutation V67T leads to a marked stabilization of the beta chain heme and does not affect the dimer-tetramer association constant, K2,4. In the C112 mutants, the intrinsic rate of beta chain heme loss with respect to recombinant HbA (HbA-wt) is significantly increased only in C112G with some heme released also from the alpha chains. Gel filtration experiments indicate that the K2,4 value is essentially unaltered in C112G and C112L, but is increased in C112V and decreased in C112N. Substitution of cysteine 93 with A or M leads to a slight decrease of the rate of beta chain heme release, whereas the obvserved K2,4 value is similar to that obtained for HbA-wt. Modifications in oxygen affinity were observed in all the mutant hemoglobins with the exception of V67T, C93A, and C112G. The data indicate that there is no correlation between tetramer stability, beta chain heme affinity, and hemoglobin functionality and therefore point to a separate regulation of these properties.  相似文献   

18.
The time-resolved spectra of photoproducts from ligand photodissociation of oxyhemoglobin are measured in the Soret spectral region for times from 10 ns to 320 microseconds after laser photolysis. Four processes are detected at a heme concentration of 80 microM: a 38-ns geminate recombination, a 137-ns tertiary relaxation, and two bimolecular processes for rebinding of molecular oxygen. The pseudo-first-order rate constants for rebinding to the alpha and beta subunits of hemoglobin are 3.2 x 10(4) s-1 (31 microseconds lifetime) and 9.4 x 10(4) s-1 (11 microseconds lifetime), respectively. The significance of kinetic measurements made at different heme concentrations is discussed in terms of the equilibrium compositions of hemoglobin tetramer and dimer mixtures. The rebinding rate constants for alpha and beta chains are observed to be about two times slower in the dimer than in the tetramer, a finding that appears to support the observation of quaternary enhancement in equilibrium ligand binding by hemoglobin tetramers.  相似文献   

19.
Rujan IN  Russu IM 《Proteins》2002,49(3):413-419
The structural transition induced by ligand binding in human hemoglobin encompasses quaternary structure changes at the interfaces between the two alphabeta dimers. In contrast, the interfaces between alpha and beta subunits within the same dimer (i.e., alpha1beta1 and alpha2beta2 interfaces) are structurally invariant. Previous work from this laboratory using NMR spectroscopy has identified four sites at the intradimeric alpha1beta1 and alpha2beta2 interfaces that, although structurally invariant, experience significant changes in the rates of proton exchange upon ligand binding. These sites are Hisalpha103(G10) and Hisalpha122(H5) in each alpha subunit of the hemoglobin tetramer. In the present work, we show that the proton exchange at the Hisalpha103(G10) sites is affected by the interactions of hemoglobin with chloride ions. Increasing concentrations of chloride ions at pH 6.45 and at 37 degrees C enhance the exchange rate of the Hisalpha103(G10) N(epsilon 2) proton. The enhancement is greater in deoxygenated than in ligated hemoglobin. In the framework of the local unfolding model for proton exchange, these results suggest that the structural free energy and/or the proton transfer reactions at the Hisalpha103(G10) sites depend on the concentration of chloride ions. Therefore, the ligand-induced changes at the Hisalpha103(G10) sites are modulated by the allosteric effect of chloride ions on hemoglobin.  相似文献   

20.
Isolated alpha and beta chains from Xenopus laevis hemoglobin have been purified. The isolation procedure yields native alpha chains whose functional behavior has been characterized and compared with that of human alpha chains. Isolated beta chains in the presence of oxygen are characterized by low stability, and hence their functional characterization was limited to the CO binding kinetics. When stoichiometric amounts of the isolated alpha and beta chains are mixed, a tetramer characterized by heme-heme interactions and oxygen affinity comparable to that of the native molecule is readily reconstituted. Moreover, both chains, under appropriate conditions, form stable hybrid tetramers with the partner subunits from human hemoglobin; results on the functional properties of these hybrid hemoglobins are presented and discussed in relation to the stereochemical model of the Root effect.  相似文献   

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