Transient kinetics of oxygen dissociation from ferrous subunits of iron-cobalt hybrid hemoglobins. The principal reaction controlling the co-operativity |
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Authors: | K Kitagishi M Ikeda-Saito T Yonetani |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104-6089. |
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Abstract: | The oxygen dissociation constants from Fe subunits in the half-ligated intermediate states of Fe-Co hybrid hemoglobins, alpha(Fe-O2)2 beta(Co)2 and alpha(Co)2 beta(Fe-O2)2, have been determined as functions of pH, temperature and inositol hexaphosphate. The oxygen dissociation rates from alpha(Fe-O2)2 beta(Co)2 are estimated to be more than 1300 s-1 for the deoxy quaternary state (T-state) and less than 3 s-1 for the oxy quaternary state (R-state) at 15 degrees C in 50 mM-Tris or Bis-Tris buffer containing 0.1 M-Cl-, while those of alpha(Co)2 beta(Fe-O2)2 are more than 180 s-1 and less than 5 s-1 for the T and R-states, respectively. The pH dependence of the oxygen dissociation rate from Fe subunits is large enough to be accounted for by the R-T transition, and implies that those half-ligated intermediate hybrids mainly exist in the R-state at pH 8.8, and in the T-state at pH 6.6, while other studies indicated that the half-ligated hybrids are essentially in the R-state at pH 7. Large activation energies of the oxygen dissociation process of 19 to 31 kcal/mol determined from the temperature dependence suggest that the process is entropy-driven. |
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