Structure-function relationships in the low-affinity mutant haemoglobin Aalborg (Gly74 (E18)beta----Arg).

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Citation

Fermi G, Perutz MF, Williamson D, Stein P, Shih DT

Structure-function relationships in the low-affinity mutant haemoglobin Aalborg (Gly74 (E18)beta----Arg).

J Mol Biol. 1992 Aug 5;226(3):883-8.

PubMed ID
1507231 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Haemoglobin Aalborg (Gly74 (E18)beta----Arg) has a reduced oxygen affinity, in both the absence and the presence of organic phosphates; it has a raised affinity for organic phosphates, and it is moderately unstable. By contrast, haemoglobin Shepherds Bush (Gly74 (E18)beta----Asp) has an increased oxygen affinity in both the absence and the presence of organic phosphates, a diminished affinity for organic phosphates and is also unstable. We have determined the crystal structure of deoxyhaemoglobin Aalborg at 2.8 A resolution and compared it to the structures of deoxy- and oxyhaemoglobin A and of deoxyhaemoglobin Shepherds Bush. The guanidinium group of Arg74(E18)beta protrudes from the haem pocket and donates hydrogen bonds to the E and F helices. The carboxylate group of Asp74(E18)beta forms a hydrogen bond only with residue EF6 and is partially buried, which may be why haemoglobin Shepherds Bush appears to be more unstable than haemoglobin Aalborg. To discover why the latter has a low oxygen affinity, we superimposed the B, G and H helices of haemoglobin A, whose conformation is known to be unaffected by ligand binding, on those of haemoglobin Aalborg. This also brought helices E and the haems into superposition, but revealed a shift of the F helix of deoxyhaemoglobin Aalborg towards the EF-corner. This shift is opposite to that which occurs on ligand binding and on transition to the quaternary oxy-structure, and is linked to an increased tilt of the proximal histidine residue away from the haem axis. Since the relative positions of helices E and F and of the haem group are thought to be the main determinants of the changes in oxygen affinity, the shift of helix F may account for the reduced oxygen affinity of haemoglobin Aalborg. The shift may be due to a combination of steric and electrostatic effects introduced by the arginine residue's side-chain. The effects of the arginine and aspartate substitutions at position E18 beta on the 2,3-diphosphoglycerate affinity are equal and opposite. They can be quantitatively accounted for by the electrostatic attraction or repulsion by the oppositely charged side-chains.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Hemoglobin subunit betaP68871Details