Structure of the altitude adapted hemoglobin of guinea pig in the R2-state.
Pairet, B., Jaenicke, E.(2010) PLoS One 5: e12389-e12389
- PubMed: 20811494
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012389
- Primary Citation of Related Structures:
3HYU - PubMed Abstract:
Guinea pigs are considered to be genetically adapted to a high altitude environment based on the consistent finding of a high oxygen affinity of their blood. The crystal structure of guinea pig hemoglobin at 1.8 A resolution suggests that the increased oxygen affinity of guinea pig hemoglobin can be explained by two factors, namely a decreased stability of the T-state and an increased stability of the R2-state. The destabilization of the T-state can be related to the substitution of a highly conserved proline (P44) to histidine (H44) in the alpha-subunit, which causes a steric hindrance with H97 of the beta-subunit in the switch region. The stabilization of the R2-state is caused by two additional salt bridges at the beta1/beta2 interface. Both factors together are supposed to serve to shift the equilibrium between the conformational states towards the high affinity relaxed states resulting in an increased oxygen affinity.
Organizational Affiliation:
Institut für Molekulare Biophysik, Johannes Gutenberg Universität, Mainz, Germany.