X-ray diffraction study of the binding of the antisickling agent 12C79 to human hemoglobin

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Abstract

The hemoglobin binding site of the antisickling agent 12C79 has been determined by x-ray crystallography. 12C79 is recognized as one of the first molecules to reach clinical trials that was designed, de novo, from x-raydetermined atomic coordinates of a protein. Several previous attempts to verify the proposed Hb binding sites via crystallographic studies have failed. Using revised experimental procedures, we obtained 12C79-deoxyhemoglobin crystals grown after reaction with oxyhemoglobin and cyanoborohydride reduction to stabilize the Schiff base linkage. The difference electron-density Fourier maps show that two 12C79 molecules bind covalently to both symmetry-related N-terminal amino groups of the hemoglobin α chains. This is in contrast to the original design that proposed the binding of one drug molecule that spans the molecular dyad to interact with both N-terminal α-amino groups.

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Wireko, F. C., & Abraham, D. J. (1991). X-ray diffraction study of the binding of the antisickling agent 12C79 to human hemoglobin. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 88(6), 2209–2211. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.6.2209

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