| Literature DB >> 10708650 |
A H Mawjood1, G Miyazaki, R Kaneko, Y Wada, K Imai.
Abstract
The cysteine residue at F9(93) of the human hemoglobin (Hb A) beta chain, conserved in mammalian and avian hemoglobins, is located near the functionally important alpha1-beta2 interface and C-terminal region of the beta chain and is reactive to sulfhydryl reagents. The functional roles of this residue are still unclear, although regulation of local blood flow through allosteric S-nitrosylation of this residue is proposed. To clarify the role of this residue and its functional homology to F9(88) of the alpha chain, we measured oxygen equilibrium curves, UV-region derivative spectra, Soret-band absorption spectra, the number of titratable -SH groups with p-mercuribenzoate and the rate of reaction of these groups with 4, 4'-dipyridine disulfide for three recombinant mutant Hbs with single amino acid substitutions: Ala-->Cys at 88alpha (rHb A88alphaC), Cys-->Ala at 93beta (rHb C93betaA) and Cys-->Thr at 93beta (rHb C93betaT). These Hbs showed increased oxygen affinities and impaired allosteric effects. The spectral data indicated that the R to T transition upon deoxygenation was partially restricted in these Hbs. The number of titratable -SH groups of liganded form was 3.2-3.5 for rHb A88alphaC compared with 2.2 for Hb A, whereas those for rHb C93betaA and rHb C93betaT were negligibly small. The reduction of rate of reaction with 4,4'-dipyridine disulfide upon deoxygenation in rHb A88alphaC was smaller than that in Hb A. Our experimental data have shown that the residues at 88alpha and 93beta have definite roles but they have no functional homology. Structure-function relationships in our mutant Hbs are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10708650 DOI: 10.1093/protein/13.2.113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Eng ISSN: 0269-2139