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Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and...

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Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition
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Page 1: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Chapter 7: Hemoglobin:

Portrait of a Protein in Action

Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company

Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer

BiochemistrySixth Edition

Page 2: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Erythrocytes (Red cells)

Page 3: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Hemoglobin and Myoglobin

• These are conjugated proteins. A simple protein has only a polypeptide chain. A conjugated protein has a non-protein part in addition to a polypeptide component. Both myoglobin and hemoglobin contain heme.

• Myoglobin - 17000 daltons (monomeric)153 amino acids

• Hemoglobin - 64500 daltons ( tetrameric) -chain has 141 amino acids-chain has 146 amino acids

Page 4: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Hemoglobin O2 carrying capability

• Erythrocytes/ml blood: 5 billion ( 5 x 109 )

• Hemoglobin/red cell: 280 million ( 2.8 x 108 )

• O2 molecules/hemoglobin: 4

• O2 ml blood: (5 x 109)(2.8 x 108)(4) = (5.6 x 1018)

or (5.6 x 1020) molecules of O2/100 ml blood

Page 5: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

A single subunit of Hemoglobin, an tetramer

Page 6: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Myoglobin, monomeric

Page 7: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

3o structure overlap: myoglobin, -globin and -globin

-Globin (blue)

-Globin (violet)

Myoglobin (green)

Page 8: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Aromatic Heme

Page 9: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Iron in Hemoglobin binding O2

Page 10: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Iron in Myoglobin binding O2

Page 11: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Resonance in Iron binding O2

Page 12: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Hemoglobin, tetramer

Page 13: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

O2 binding: Hemoglobin & Myoglobin

P50 = 2 torr

P50 = 26 torr

Page 14: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

O2 transport capability, a comparison

Page 15: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Resting state vs exercise

Page 16: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

O2 Binding Changes 4o Structure

Page 17: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Allosteric Proteins

• There are two limiting models of allosterism:

•Monod, Wyman & Changeux: Two State, concerted

•Koshland, Nemethy & Filmer: One State, sequential

• Allosteric effectors (modulators) bind to a protein at a site separate from the functional binding site (modulators may be activators or inhibitors)

• Oxygen binding and release from Hb are regulated by allosteric interactions

• Hemoglobin cooperativity behaves as a mix of the above two models.

Page 18: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Concerted, two state modelMonod, Wyman & Changeux

Page 19: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

R-state vs T-state Binding

Page 20: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Sequential, one state model

Koshland, Nemethy & Filmer

Page 21: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Decreasing O2 affinity

2,3-bisphospho-glycerate (2,3-BPG)

• Lowers the affinity of oxygen for Hemoglobin

Page 22: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG)

The binding pocket for BPG contains 4 His and 2 Lys

Page 23: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Binding of bisphosphoglycerate

Page 24: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

The Bohr Effect

Bohr Effect:

• Lowering the pH decreases the affinity of oxygen for Hb

Page 25: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Loss of O2 from Hemoglobin

Carbamate:

• CO2 combines with NH2 at the N-terminus of globins

Page 26: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Carbamate formation

Covalent binding at the N-terminus of each subunit

Page 27: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Combined Effects

CO2 , BPG and pHare all allostericeffectors of hemoglobin.

Page 28: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

CO2 & Acid from Muscle

Page 29: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

CO2 & Hemoglobin Blood Buffering

Metabolic oxidation in cells uses oxygen and produces CO2 .

The pO2 drops to ~20 torr and oxygen is released from incoming HbO2

-.

HbO2- <===> Hb- + O2

Release is facilitated by CO2 reacting with the N-terminus of each hemoglobin subunit, by non-covalent binding of BPG and the Bohr effect.

Page 30: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Events at Cell sites

The localized increase in CO2 results in formation of carbonic acid which ionizes to give bicarbonate and H+.

CO2 + HOH <===> H2CO3 carbonic anhydrase

H2CO3 <===> HCO3- + H+ pKa = 6.3

The increase in [H+] promotes protonation of Hb-.

HHb <===> Hb- + H+ pKa = 8.2

Page 31: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Events at Cell sites

The predominant species in this equilibrium at pH 7.2 is HHb.

So, O2 remains at the cell site, HHb carries a proton back to the lungs and bicarbonate carries CO2 .

Charge stability of the erythrocyte is maintained via a chloride shift, Cl- <==> HCO3

- .

Page 32: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.
Page 33: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Events at Lung sites

Breathing air into the lungs increases the partial pressure of O2 to ~100 torr.

This results in O2 uptake by HHb to form HHbO2.

HHb + O2 <===> HHbO2

Ionization of HHbO2 then occurs and HbO2-

carries O2 away from the lungs.

HHbO2 <===> HbO2- + H+ pKa = 6.6

So, the predominant species at pH (7.4) is HbO2-.

Page 34: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Events at Lung sites

The localized increase in [H+] from hemoglobin ionization serves to protonate HCO3

- .

H2CO3 <===> HCO3- + H+ pKa = 6.3

H2CO3 <===> CO2 + HOH carbonic anhydrase

The resulting H2CO3 decomposes in presence of carbonic anhydrase and CO2 is released in the lungs.

Charge stability of the erythrocyte is maintained again via a chloride shift, HCO3

- <==> Cl-.

Page 35: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Sickle Cell due to Glu 6 Val 6

Page 36: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.
Page 37: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Binding relationships

The binding of O2 to myoglobin can be shown by the equilibriuim:

Mb + O2 <===> MbO2 (1)

The dissociation constant for the loss of O2 is: [Mb][O2]

Keq = KD = -------------- (2) [MbO2]

Define the fraction of sites, Y, occupied by O2 as: [MbO2] sites bound

Y = --------------------- = ----------------- (3) [Mb] + [MbO2] total sites

Page 38: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

Binding relationships

Substituting from equation (2) into (3): [MbO2] 1

Y = ---------------------------- = ------------K [MbO2] K ---------- + [MbO2] ---- + 1 O2 O2

or: [O2] pO2 pO2 Y = ---------- = ----------- = ------------

K + O2 K + pO2 p50 + pO2

Evaluating K at Y = 0.5 gives K = p50 for O2

Page 39: Chapter 7: Hemoglobin: Portrait of a Protein in Action Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition.

End of Chapter 7

Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company

Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer

BiochemistrySixth Edition


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