hemoglobin: a paradigm for cooperativity and allosteric regulation

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Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

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Page 1: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Hemoglobin:A Paradigm for Cooperativity and

Allosteric Regulation

Page 2: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Why do we breathe?

http://www.uni.edu/schneidj/webquests/spring04/tvbroadcast/circulatorysystem.html

Page 3: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Cellular Requirement for O2

Catabolism

(Oxidation)

O2

ADP

ATP

NADP+

NADPH

Intermediates

Anabolism

(Biosynthesis)

ProteinsFats

Carbohydrates(Nutrients)

Waste

(CO2/ Urea/ etc.)

Page 4: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Oxygen Carriers

Diffusion

Limited solubility of O2 in Blood and Cell Water

Page 5: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Myoglobin and Hemoglobin

• Myoglobin (Mb)– Increases O2 solubility in tissues

(muscle)

– Facilitates O2 diffusion

– Stores O2 in tissues

• Hemoglobin (Hb)– Transports O2 from lungs to peripheral

tissues (erythrocytes)

Page 6: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Oxygen Transport

O2

O2 O2

deoxyHb

deoxyMbMbO2

Hb(O2)n Hb(O2)n

deoxyHb

deoxyHb

LUNGS MUSCLE CELL

pO2 = ~20- 30 torr

RED BLOOD CELLS

O2 + 4e– + 4H+ 2H2O

pO2 = 100 torr

Page 7: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Myoglobin

Small Intracellular Protein in Vertebrate Muscle

Page 8: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Function(s) of Myoglobin

Facilitate O2 Diffusion in Muscle

O2 Storage (aquatic mammals)

Page 9: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-1

Structure of Sperm Whale Myoglobin

Page 10: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-2

The Heme Prosthetic Group

Page 11: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Properties of Heme Prosthetic Group in Myoglobin

• Tightly bound

• Synthesized separately from myoglobin

• Fe2+ Coordination– Nitrogens of heme (4)

– His (F8): proximal histidine

• His (E7): distal histidine

• Ligands: O2, CO, and NO

Page 12: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Ligands

Small molecules that bind to proteins by non-covalent

interactions(e.g. O2 to myoglobin)

Page 13: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Ligand Binding

•usually transient and reversible interaction with others molecule (= ligands) such as metals, hormones

•often involves “molecular breathing” of the protein, i.e. ability to undergo small conformational changes

•often induces molecular rearrangements in the protein

• ligand binding sites are- highly conserved- complementary in size, shape, and charge

Page 14: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

• prosthetic (permanent, non-proteinaceous)

•group of Mb and Hb

• incorporated into Hb and Mb during folding

• responsible for reversible O2 binding

• responsible for red color of blood and muscles

Heme

Page 15: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

central Fe2+

Heme – Structure

2 vinyl groups (buriedin protein)

4 methyl groups

2 propionate groups(exposed)

Page 16: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

•Fe2+ has 6 coordination sites

•4 with N of pyrrole rings,

•2 perpendicular to ring

•Mb/Hb: 5th coordination site is occupied with proximal His

•6th coordination site:O2 oxyhemoglobinnone deoxyhemoglobinCO carboxyhemoglobin

Heme – Iron Coordination

Page 17: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Heme – Binding of CO vs. O2

• free heme binds C0 105 times better than O2

•kinked binding topology in Mb/Hbfavors O2 (100-fold)

TOTAL: CO binding ~ 230 fold stronger than O2 binding (Carbon monoxide poisoning)

Page 18: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Function(s) of Myoglobin

Facilitate O2 Diffusion in Muscle

O2 Storage (aquatic mammals)

Page 19: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Myoglobin (Mb)

•primarily found in muscle (highly abundant in marine mammals such as whales)

•single polypeptide (153 aa) with one bound heme

•very simple oxygen binder: binds oxygen at high pO2, releases it at low pO2

Mb + O2 MbO2

• typical globin fold

Page 20: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

8 helices (A-H) and loops in between

20MCDB310 – Chapter 5: Protein Function

The Globin Fold

Page 21: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Myoglobin – Oxygen Binding Curve

Page 22: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Binding/Association Constant Ka

Quantitatively describes the affinity of a protein P for its ligand L

P + L PL

the higher the binding affinity, the higher Ka

[L][P]

]PL[

aK

Page 23: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Dissociation Constant Kd

P + L PL

the higher the binding affinity, the smaller Kd

]PL[

[L][P]1

ad KK

Example: Ka = 106 M-1 Kd = 10-6 M

Page 24: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Degree of Saturation,

0 1

[P][PL]

[PL]

]sites binding total[

sites] binding [occupied

Fraction of binding sites that are occupied by ligand at any given ligand concentration

Page 25: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Degree of Saturation,

Using

[L]

[L]

[L]1

[L]

da

a

KK

K

If [L] = Kd = 0.5

Kd is the ligand concentration at which 50% of the binding sites are occupied

[L][P]

]PL[

aK [L][P][PL] aK

Page 26: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Ligand Binding Curve

[L]

[L]

d K

Page 27: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Some Examples

with KD = 1 µM

Question: What fraction of the protein has ligand bound when the [L] is 1 µM or 10 µM?

[L] = 1 µM:

[L]

[L]

d K

5.0μM1μM1

μM1

[L]

[L]

d

K

[L] = 10 µM: 91.0μM10μM1

μM10

[L]

[L]

d

K

Page 28: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Some Examples for Dissociation Constants

Page 29: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Myoglobin – Oxygen Binding Curve Revisited

[L]

[L]

d K

When ligand is a gas, partial pressures = concentrations

250

2

O

O

pp

p

Page 30: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Saturation of Mb depends on

•the binding constant of Mb for O2 (KD = p50 = 2.8 torr)

•the concentration of O2 (pO2)

Question: What is the fractional saturation of Mb?

pO2 = 1 torr:

pO2 = 10 torr:

Myoglobin – Oxygen Binding Curve Revisited

26.0torr8.2torr1

torr1

78.0torr8.2torr10

torr10

[L]

[L]

d K

Page 31: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

pO2 in tissue ~ 4 kPa

Myoglobin – An Oxygen Storage!

pO2 in lung ~ 13 kPa

10 kPa = 76 torr

Page 32: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Hemoglobin(22)

Page 33: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Hemoglobin (Hb)

•present in erythrocytes (makes blood look red, 34% of weight is Hb)

Different Hb subtypes:•Hb A (adult): two (141 aa) and two (146 aa)

subunits that are arranged as a pair of identical subunits (2 subunits)

•Hb F (fetal): two and two chains

Page 34: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

12

2 1

Hemoglobin – 3D Structure

Page 35: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Each subunit has 1 heme, which binds 1 O2

Lehninger, Figure 7-5, 7-6

O2

Heme

Page 36: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Hemoglobin

Erythrocytes:

•1 ml blood: 5 x 109 erythrocytes•1 erythrocyte: 3 x 108 Hb molecules •Hb is a good marker for number of red blood cells

Homology:

• 50% of AA are identical between and subunits

• 20% of AA are identical between / and Mb

Page 37: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Function of Hemoglobin

O2 binding in lungs

O2 release in tissues

Page 38: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Oxygen Transport

O2

O2 O2

deoxyHb

deoxyMbMbO2

Hb(O2)n Hb(O2)n

deoxyHb

deoxyHb

LUNGS MUSCLE CELL

pO2 = ~20- 30 torr

RED BLOOD CELLS

O2 + 4e– + 4H+ 2H2O

pO2 = 100 torr

Page 39: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Oxygen binds to hemoglobin and myoglobin differently

Myoglobin

Hemoglobin

Page 40: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Oxygen binding to hemoglobin

Θ = fraction of binding sites that are occupiedpO2 = partial pressure of oxygen

Page 41: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

p50 is the pO2 where half the binding sites are occupied

p50

Page 42: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Hb has evolved to transport O2

pO2 In Lungs

pO2 In Tissues

p50

38%

Page 43: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Hb gains cooperativity by switching between 2 states

Lehninger Figure 7-10

T state (Low Affinity) R state (high affinity)

Page 44: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

The Concerted ModelAll or nothing mechanism

T RLehninger, Figure 7-14

Page 45: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

The Concerted ModelAll or nothing mechanism

T RLehninger, Figure 7-14

Page 46: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

The Sequential Model

Page 47: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Hb follows a little of both

T RLehninger, Figure 7-14

Page 48: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-8

Movements of the Heme and the F Helix During the T —> R Transition

Page 49: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Local structural changes around the Heme are communicated to the rest of Hb

By Janet Iwasa,https://iwasa.hms.harvard.edu/project_pages/hemoglobin/hemoglobin.html

Page 50: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-9

Changes in the 1–2 Interface during the T —> R Transition in

Hemoglobin

Page 51: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-9 part 1

Changes in the 1–2 Interface during the T —> R Transition in

Hemoglobin

Page 52: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-9 part 2

Changes in the 1–2 Interface during the T —> R Transition in

Hemoglobin

Page 53: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-10

Networks of Ion Pairs and Hydrogen Bonds in Deoxyhemoglobin

Page 54: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

T vs R State

(1) Change at interface between and

(2) R state is more compact, and relaxed(3) T state has additional salt bridges, which makes it more tense

(4) In R state individual O2 sites have higher affinity for O2.

- better Fe-O2 bond length - fewer steric repulsions associated

with oxygen binding.

Page 55: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Without cooperativity Hb could not efficiently transport oxygen

T state

LungsTissues

Page 56: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

homotropic, positive (= cooperative binding)

Allosteric regulation of protein function

Page 57: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

homotropic, positive (= cooperative binding)

Allosteric regulation of protein function

heterotropic, negative

Page 58: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

The Bohr Effect

• H+ and CO2 are negative, heterotropic modulators of Hb

• metabolizing tissue: H+ and CO2 accumulate bind to Hb and lower the affinity of Hb for O2

Hb releases O2

• lungs: CO2 and H+ dissociate from Hb increases the affinity of Hb for O2

Hb binds O2

• increase the efficiency of Hb as O2 transporter

Hb also binds and transports H+ and CO2 from tissue to lungs and kidneys for secretion

Page 59: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

The Bohr Effect

Lungs: pO2 = 100 torr, high pH (7.6), low [CO2] Hb has high affinity for O2

Tissue: pO2 = 20 torr, low pH (7.2), high [CO2] Hb has low affinity for O2

CO2 + H2O HCO3- + H+

CO2 + H2O HCO3- + H+

Page 60: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Bohr effect

pH Dependence of O2 Binding to Hb

Page 61: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Mechanism of Bohr Effect1. Protonation of His-146

His-146+ forms salt bridge with nearby Asp-94 stabilizes low affinity T-state

O2 is released as pH drops

61MCDB310 – Chapter 5: Protein Function

Page 62: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-12

Roles of Hemoglobin and Myoglobin in O2 and CO2 Transport

Page 63: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Heterotropic Negative Modulator

Or: 2,3-Diphosphoglycerate (DPG)

Page 64: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

BPG is negatively charged

Page 65: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

BPG binds to the central cavity of Hb

Page 66: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

BPG binds to the positively charged central cavity of Hb

By Janet Iwasa,https://iwasa.hms.harvard.edu/project_pages/hemoglobin/hemoglobin.html

Page 67: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

BPG allows for release of O2

pO2 In LungsAt Sea Level

pO2 In Tissues

No BPG

5mM BPG

Page 68: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

In Class Activity:

Page 69: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Ligand Binding can affect Protein Function

• Cooperativity– 1 ligand bound = higher affinity for more ligands– Concerted vs Sequential

• Allosteric regulation– 1 regulator binding affects binding of ligand – Homotropic vs heterotropic– Positive vs Negative

Page 70: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

From Protein Structure to Function

1. Hemoglobin and myoglobin: Principles of reversible ligand binding

2. (Antibodies: Principles of specific, high affinity ligand binding)

3. Myosin and actin: Protein activity modulated by ATP

4. Enzymes

Page 71: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Table 7-1

Hemoglobin Variants

Page 72: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Sickle Cell anemia

• Glu ——> Val (residue 6 of -chain)

• Leads to hydrophobic interactions between hemoglobin molecules

• Hemoglobin fibers

• Sickling of erythrocytes

• Increased resistance to malaria

Page 73: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-17a

Normal Erythrocytes

Page 74: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-17b

Sickled Erythrocytes

Page 75: Hemoglobin: A Paradigm for Cooperativity and Allosteric Regulation

Figure 7-20

Correspondence between Malaria and Sickle-Cell Gene