4.4 Article

Protein conformational heterogeneity as a binding catalyst: ESI-MS study of hemoglobin H formation

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 46, Issue 7, Pages 2020-2026

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi062032q

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Our previous studies of hemoglobin tetramer assembly in vitro suggested that the initial step in the oligomerization process, which ultimately dictates the high fidelity of the heterotetramer (alpha*beta*)(2) assembly, is the binding of a flexible heme-free beta-globin chain to a highly ordered heme-bound alpha*-globin. In this work, we extend these studies to investigate formation of the homotetrameric hemoglobin H, whose formation in vivo is a well-documented clinical consequence of significant overexpression of beta-globin in alpha-thalassemic disorders. Upon reconstitution of the isolated beta-globin with excess heme, the predominant species in the ESI mass spectrum corresponds to the homotetramer beta*(4), alongside homodimeric species and monomeric beta-globin chains in both apo and holo forms. The assembly process of the hemoglobin H homotetramer apparently follows a scenario similar to that of a normal heterodimeric hemoglobin (alpha*beta*)(2) species, with the asymmetric binding event between compact and flexible polypeptide chains being the initial step. The extreme importance of large-scale chain dynamics and conformational heterogeneity for the protein assembly process is highlighted by the inability of highly structured alpha-globins to undergo ordered oligomerization to form dimers and tetramers as opposed to indiscriminate aggregation.

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