Ann Taylor/Hemoglobin
From Proteopedia
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'''Hemoglobin''' is an oxygen-transport protein. Hemoglobin is an [[allosteric protein]]. It is a tetramer composed of two types of subunits designated α and β, with stoichiometry <scene name='Hemoglobin/Alpha2beta2/7'>α2β2</scene>. The <scene name='Hemoglobin/Foursubunits/5'>four subunits</scene> of hemoglobin sit roughly at the corners of a tetrahedron, facing each other across a <scene name='57/576710/Cavity/1'>cavity</scene> at the center of the molecule. | '''Hemoglobin''' is an oxygen-transport protein. Hemoglobin is an [[allosteric protein]]. It is a tetramer composed of two types of subunits designated α and β, with stoichiometry <scene name='Hemoglobin/Alpha2beta2/7'>α2β2</scene>. The <scene name='Hemoglobin/Foursubunits/5'>four subunits</scene> of hemoglobin sit roughly at the corners of a tetrahedron, facing each other across a <scene name='57/576710/Cavity/1'>cavity</scene> at the center of the molecule. | ||
- | The α and β subunits have very similar structures, despite their sequence differences. We will use a single <scene name=' | + | The α and β subunits have very similar structures, despite their sequence differences. We will use a single <scene name='57/576710/A_subunit_rainbow/1'>α chain</scene> to examine the subunit structure more closely. The 6 major and 2 short α-helices that make up the structure of a Hb subunit (the "globin fold") are <scene name='57/576710/A_subunit_labelled_helices/1'>labeled A through H</scene>, which is the traditional naming scheme. For example, the proximal histidine (the tightest protein Fe ligand) is often called <scene name='Hemoglobin/3hhb_chaina_hisf9/5'>His F9</scene>, since it is residue 9 on helix F (it is residue 87 in the human α chain). The helices form an approximately-cylindrical bundle, with the heme and its central Fe atom bound in a <scene name='Hemoglobin/3hhb_chaina_efpocket/4'>hydrophobic pocket between the E and F helices</scene>. |
Revision as of 16:34, 27 January 2014
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