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Protein Science, Vol 7, Issue 3 673-680, Copyright © 1998 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ARTICLE |
N. GRIFFON, V. BAUDIN, W. DIERYCK, A. DUMOULIN, J. PAGNIER, C. POYART and M. C. MARDEN
Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale, Unite 473, Hopital de Bicetre, 94276 Le Kremlin-Bicetre Cedex, France
One of the main difficulties with blood substitutes based on hemoglobin (Hb) solutions is the auto-oxidation of the hemes, a problem aggravated by the dimerization of Hb tetramers. We have employed a method to study the oxyHb tetramer-dimer equilibrium based on the rate of auto-oxidation as a function of protein concentration. The 16-fold difference in dimer and tetramer auto-oxidation rates (in 20 mM phosphate buffer at pH 7.0, 37{deg}C) was exploited to determine the fraction dimer. The results show a transition of the auto-oxidation rate from low to high protein concentrations, allowing the determination of the tetramer-dimer dissociation coefficient K(4,2) = [Dimer](2)/[Tetramer]. A 14-fold increase in K(4,2) was observed for addition of 10 mM of the allosteric effector inositol hexaphosphate (IHP). Recombinant hemoglobins (rHb) were genetically engineered to obtain Hb with a lower oxygen affinity than native Hb (Hb A). The rHb {alpha}(2){beta}(2) [(C7) F41Y/(G4) N102Y] shows a fivefold increase in K(4,2) at pH 7.0, 37{deg}C. An atmosphere of pure oxygen is necessary in this case to insure fully oxygenated Hb. When this condition is satisfied, this method provides an efficient technique to characterize both the tetramer-dimer equilibrium and the auto-oxidation rates of various oxyHb. For low oxygen affinity Hb equilibrated under air, the presence of deoxy subunits accelerates the auto-oxidation. Although a full analysis is complicated, the auto-oxidation studies for air equilibrated samples are more relevant to the development of a blood substitute based on Hb solutions. The double mutants, rHb {alpha}(2){beta}(2) [(C7) F41Y/(G4) N102A] and rHb {alpha}(2){beta}(2) [(C7) F41Y/(E10) K66T], show a lower oxygen affinity and a higher rate of oxidation than Hb A. Simulations of the auto-oxidation rate versus Hb concentration indicate that very high protein concentrations are required to observe the tetramer auto-oxidation rate. Because the dimers oxidize much more rapidly, even a small fraction dimer will influence the observed oxidation rate.
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