Ann Taylor/Hemoglobin

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The Bohr effect is the increased stability of the T state due to protonation of histidine residues, especially <scene name='57/576710/Bohr_effect/1'>His 146</scene> of the beta chains. This is the C terminal residue of the beta chain. In the T state, the C terminal carboxylate group interacts with the positively charged side chain of lysine 40 of an alpha chain. When His 146 is protonated, it can also form an ionic interaction with Asp 94. This second interaction is one of several interactions which stabilizes the T state at lower pH.
The Bohr effect is the increased stability of the T state due to protonation of histidine residues, especially <scene name='57/576710/Bohr_effect/1'>His 146</scene> of the beta chains. This is the C terminal residue of the beta chain. In the T state, the C terminal carboxylate group interacts with the positively charged side chain of lysine 40 of an alpha chain. When His 146 is protonated, it can also form an ionic interaction with Asp 94. This second interaction is one of several interactions which stabilizes the T state at lower pH.
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Some fish exhibit a more extreme stabilization at low pH, to the extent that the fully oxygenated species cannot be generated at atmospheric oxygen concentrations. <ref>PMID: 15117955</ref> This is due to several ionic interactions not found in the human or mammalian hemoglobins. A novel salt bridge is found between His-69� and Asp-72� of the beta chains in the T state. Additional proton binding to the T state occurs through a pair of carboxyl groups, Asp-96�α1 and Asp-101β�2. These groups
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share a proton in the T state that is lost in the R state as the two �� dimers rotate, pulling the carboxyl side chains apart, allowing them to both have a negative charge. Interestingly, no salt bridge is formed by His-146� at C terminus of the beta chain, in contrast to the Bohr effect seen in human hemoglobin and described above. This may be because the serine at position 93 is changed to a cysteine in Tuna, which� seems to prevent this interaction rather than strengthen it.
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==References===
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<references/>
=='''Content Donators'''==
=='''Content Donators'''==
Much of this page's content originally came from the [[Hemoglobin]] page. To ensure stability during my class and to include some specific data we will be using in a paper discussion, this page was created.
Much of this page's content originally came from the [[Hemoglobin]] page. To ensure stability during my class and to include some specific data we will be using in a paper discussion, this page was created.

Revision as of 02:19, 28 January 2014

Human Hemoglobin α chain (grey and pink) β chain (green and yellow) with bound O2 1gzx

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Ann Taylor

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