Haemoglobin and Myoglobin Structure Flashcards

1
Q

How does myoglobin deliver more O2 than blood?

A

By storing oxygen in muscles

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2
Q

How much myoglobin do human miscles have?

A

0.5-0.7 mmol/L myoglobin which is enough for about 7 seconds of intense activity.

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3
Q

The tissue, after it has exhausted its store of myoglobin - where does it depend on for oxygen delivery? (which organ)

A

The lungs

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4
Q

This is known as muscle globin and has an ancient globin fold that provides a hydrophobic pocket to bind a haem group.

A

Myoglobin

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5
Q

How many amino acids are there in the primary structure of myoglobin?

A

150 amino acids

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6
Q

How many secondary structures are there in myoglobin? (include helices and loops)

A

8 alpha helices (A-H) and connecting loops in between

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7
Q

What is the tertiary structure of myoglobin?

A

globin fold with hydrophobic pocket (the structure is in the name)

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8
Q

Which amino acid does the haem group in a globin protein bind to?

A

Histidine F8 (8th amino acid)

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9
Q

What is the quaternary structure of myoglobin?

A

Monomeric (one polypeptide chain)

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10
Q

This includes four pyrrole rings linked together in a plane. This is a prosthetic group or a cofactor.

A

Haem/heme

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11
Q

These are structures that bind to proteins or enzymes to enable them to do a certain function. (such as release oxygen)

A

Cofactors/prosthetic groups

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12
Q

What is the difference between oxyhaemoglobin and deoxyhaemoglobin under spectroscopy?

A

Oxyhaemoglobin has a bright red colour
Deoxyghaemoglobin has a dull red colour

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13
Q

This is the process by which concentration of dissolved molecules is quantified by wavelength of light and absorbance of light.

A

Spectroscopy

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14
Q

What gives the haem its characteristic red colour?

A

Molecular electronic orbitals / Fe2+

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15
Q

The binding of oxygen to the Fe2+ is a what kind of reaction?

A

Reversible reaction meaning oxygen can bind and unbind from the Fe2+

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16
Q

How is Haem Fe2+ attached to the globin protein? Where does it link?

A

Histidine F8

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17
Q

This builds on the concept of steric hindrance in that the impossibility of 2 atoms occupying the same space.

A

Allosteric control

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18
Q

What is an example of allosteric control of oxygen affinity in myoglobin?

A

Lactate. Lactate reduces myoglobin’s affinity for oxygen but doesn’t bind where it binds

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19
Q

Myoglobin is saturated with ______ at low ____. So it releases this when cellular _____ is very low.

A

O2, pO2, pO2

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20
Q

The availability of O2 to cellular proteins depends on: (2 things)

A

pO2 in local environment
binding affinity of O2 to hemoglobin

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21
Q

Hemoglobin in RBCs need to be able to do these: (2 things)

A

Bind to O2 in the lungs under 100 torr (pO2)
Bind to O2 in the peripheral tissues under 20 torr (pO2)

22
Q

What did hemoglobin evolved to in terms of binding?

A

It evolved to binding less tightly on oxygen in comparison to myoglobin because it needs to be able to dump oxygen pretty quickly

23
Q

This is a tetramer that has four globin proteins associated together non-covalently. It can bond to up to 4 oxygens.

A

Haemoglobin

24
Q

This acts as O2 store in the muscle.

A

Myoglobin

25
Q

What shape are the crystals (hemoglobic conformations) under aerobic conditions?

A

Needle shaped

26
Q

What shape are the crystals (hemoglobic conformations) under anaerobic conditions?

A

Hexagonal, plate shaped crystals

27
Q

This type of haemoglobin has a high affinity for oxygen

A

Oxyhaemoglobin

28
Q

This type of haemoglobin has a low affinity for oxygen

A

Deoxyghaemoglobin

29
Q

This model was proposed in 1965 by Monod, Wyman and Changeux. States that subunits an be in a low activity of high activity conformation. Especially that all subunits must be in the same state.

A

MWC concerted model

30
Q

In the MWC concerted model, what does it say about equilibrium?

A

That binding each substrate shifts equilibrium in favour of R.

31
Q

These stabilise the T form according to MWC model.

A

inhibitors

32
Q

These stabilise the R form according to MWC model.

A

Acceptors

33
Q

This model states that one substrate binding induces a T-R conformational change in only one subunit. This conformational change influences the neighbouring subunits and changes their affinity for one substrate; introduces the idea of cooperativity.

A

KNF sequential model (Koshland, Nemethy, and Filmer)

34
Q

Where does the oxygen bind to in myoglobin and haemoglobin?

A

To the haem group

35
Q

Affinity for oxygen in myoglobin and haemoglobin are altered by _______ binding elsewhere.

A

molecules (like lactate)

36
Q

This requires multiple interacting subunits and gives a sigmoidal binding curve.

A

Cooperativity

37
Q

This shifts the binding affinity to a physiologically relevant oxygen concentration.

A

Cooperativity

38
Q

Approximately how much myoglobin do human muscles have?

A

0.5-0.7 mmol/L of myoglobin (only enough for about 7 seconds of intense activity)

39
Q

True or false. The quaternary structure of myoglobin is multimeric and the quaternary structure of haemoglobin is monomeric.

A

False. Myoglobin is monomeric and haemoglobin is multimeric (tetramer)

40
Q

How many coordinate bonds does haem have? Where do they bond?

A

6 coordinate bonds. 4 to nitrogen, 1 to histidine F8 and 1 to O2.

41
Q

True or false. Haem includes four pyrimidine rings linked together in a plane.

A

False. Haem includes four pyrrole rings.

42
Q

This is located on the opposite side of the haem and distorts the binding of gas molecules to the 6th coordination position (of O2) on haem Fe2+.

A

Histidine E7

43
Q

What is the purpose of histidine E7?

A

To reduce the binding affinity of oxygen to myoglobin which will make it easier to release oxygen to the muscle cell.

44
Q

True or false. Allosteric means without overlapping.

A

That’s true. In terms of myoglobin, this means having another binding spot for another molecule (like lactate)

45
Q

What is the partial pressure of oxygen in the lungs and muscle respectively?

A

100 torr and 20 torr. So the partial pressure of the lungs is higher than that of the muscle.

46
Q

True or false. Haemoglobin can change shape when dumping oxygens more efficiently in peripheral tissues.

A

True

47
Q

True or false. The globin proteins in haemoglobin are associated together with covalent bonds.

A

False. They are linked to each other with non-covalent bonds.

48
Q

What’s the difference between the KNF and MWC concerted model?

A

KNF Sequential Model - states that haemoglobin states change gradually from Tense to Relaxed
> supports positive and negative cooperativity
> support sigmoidal binding curve

MWC Concerted Model - states that haemoglobin states change all at once from Tense to Relaxed. So the state of haemoglobin can only be one or the other.

49
Q

True or false. Allosteric control is only found in myoglobin.

A

False. Allosteric control is found in both haemoglobin and myoglobin.

Allosteric control is important for changing the affinity of oxygen via molecules binding elsewhere.

50
Q

What is the shape of myoglobin and haemoglobin curves? Respectively.

A

Hyperbolic curve; sigmoidal curve