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Haptoglobin-Hemoglobin Structure

Image:Newpathwayblackpng.png
Figure 1. Hb-Hp/CD-163 Pathway by Ololade

Hemoglobin (Hb) is arguably one of the most studied proteins of all time. Hb is essential for life because for the oxygen transport in our bodies . Like most entities in life, too much of something may actually harm you. High concentrations of Hb released from red blood cells could cost oxidative damage to the body. In order to prevent this, haptoglobin 1-1 (Hp), an abundant glycoprotein in blood binds free hemoglobin (Hb) dimers in one of the strongest non-covalent binding events known in biology.

Function

During intravascular hemolysis Hb which is physiological a is released from red blood cells in to the extracellular environment. Hb then dissociates into dimers exposing . Hp binds shields Hb and shields these redox active residues and exposes and epiptope recognized by the multifunctional receptor, CD163.

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Disease

Intravascular hemolysis is implicated in various diseases

Relevance

Structural highlights

(http://www.umass.edu Igor)


This is a sample scene created with SAT to by Group, and another to make of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes.

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References

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