Abstract
Direct experimental resolution of the ligation intermediates for the reaction of human hemoglobin with CO reveals the distribution of ligated states as a function of saturation. At low saturation, binding of CO occurs with slightly higher affinity to the β chains, but pairwise interactions are more pronounced between the α chains. At high saturation, the two chains tend to behave identically. The sequence of CO ligation reconstructed from the distribution of intermediates shows that the overall increase in CO affinity is 588-fold, but it is not distributed uniformly among the ligation steps. The affinity increases 16.5-fold in the second ligation step, 4.6- fold in the third ligation step, and 7.7-fold in the fourth ligation step. This pattern and the detailed distribution of ligated states cannot be immediately reconciled with the predictions of either the concerted allosteric model of Monod-Wyman-Changeux or the sequential model of Koshland- Nemethy-Filmer and underscore a more subtle mechanism for hemoglobin cooperativity.
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CITATION STYLE
Perrella, M., & Di Cera, E. (1999). CO ligation intermediates and the mechanism of hemoglobin cooperativity. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274(5), 2605–2608. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.274.5.2605
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