Proteins - Lecture Seven Flashcards

Proteins in Action: Oxygen Transport and Storage by Haemoglobin and Myoglobin

1
Q

Myoglobin (muscle globin)

A

Stores oxygen in the tissue

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2
Q

Myoglobin primary structure

A

~150 amino acids

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3
Q

Myoglobin secondary structure

A
Eight alpha-helices (A-H)
Connecting loops (AB, BC, etc)
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4
Q

Myoglobin tertiary structure

A

Globing folds with a hydrophobic pocket

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5
Q

Myoglobin quaternary structure

A

Monomeric (single polypeptide chain)

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6
Q

Globin fold

A

Provides a hydrophobic pocket to bind a haem group

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7
Q

Haem

A

Four pyrrole rings linked together (a protoporphyrin) in a plane that binds to His F8 in globulin protein

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8
Q

Iron

A

Six coordinate bonds- 4 to N atoms of the haem, 1 to a N atom of histidine F8 the globin, 1 to O2 which bonds off at an angle. The double bonds are very hydrophobic

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9
Q

Binding oxygen to the Fe2+

A

Is reversible interaction

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10
Q

Electronic molecular orbits of protoporphyrin

A

Gives red colour

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11
Q

Beer-Lambert Law

A

Converts from absorbance to concentration

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12
Q

Shape of spectrum

A

Differs with colour and with chemical nature of solute

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13
Q

Haem spectrum

A

Has visible absorbance (and therefore colour) that differs between bright red oxyhemoglobin (HbO2) and dull red deoxyhaemoglobin (Hb)

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14
Q

His E7

A

Located on opposite side of haem and distorts binding of gas molecules to 6th coordination positive of harm Fe2+, this reduces the binding affinity of oxygen to myoglobin, making it easier to release oxygen to the muscle cell

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15
Q

Binding affinity

A

Strength of the binding interaction between a single biomolecule

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16
Q

Deoxyhaemoglobin

A

Dished haem

17
Q

Oxyhaemoglobin

A

Flat haem

Pulls histidine F8 and helix F towards the binding site, anything that keeps helix F away will weaken oxygen binding

18
Q

Allosteric control

A

Type of enzyme regulation involving the binding of a non-substrate molecule at locations on the enzyme other than the active site.

19
Q

Lactate

A

Decreases myoglobin’s affinity for oxygen but does not bind where oxygen binds but somewhere else on the myoglobin
Lactate build up in muscles promotes oxygen release from myoglobin, increasing O2 availability for respiration

20
Q

Myoglobin at low pO2

A

Is O2 saturated and only releases O2 ay low pO2

21
Q

pO2 in lungs

A

~100 Torr

22
Q

pO2 in resting muscle

A

~20 Torr

23
Q

The availability of O2 to cellular proteins depends on

A

The pO2 in the local environment

The binding affinity of O2 to myoglobin or haemoglobin

24
Q

Haemoglobin in red blood cells in the blood needs to be able to:

A

Bind O2 in the vicinity of the lungs where the pO2 is ~100 Torr
Release the O2 in the vicinity of peripheral tissues where the pO2 is ~20 Torr

25
Q

Haemoglobin

A

Four globin proteins associate together non-covalently
Each globin protein contains one haem and each can bind one O2 (1, 2, 3 or 4 O2 can bind per one Hb tetramer)
Haemoglobin is a tetramer instead of

26
Q

Similarities between haemoglobin and myoglobin

A

Oxygen binds to iron of haem
Shift from dull to bright red allows monitoring O2 binding
Affinity for oxygen is altered by molecules (e.g. lactate to myoglobin) binding elsewhere (allosteric control)

27
Q

Differences between haemoglobin and myoglobin

A

Monomer VS tetramer
Tighter, hyperbolic VS weaker, sigmoidal binding curve
Store in tissue VS transport molecule