Abstract

Most hemoglobins serve for the transport or storage of O(2). Although hemoglobins are widespread in "entomostracan" Crustacea, malacostracans harbor the copper-containing hemocyanin in their hemolymph. Usually, only one type of respiratory protein occurs within a single species. Here, we report the identification of a hemoglobin of the shore crab Carcinus maenas (Malacostraca, Brachyura). In contrast to the dodecameric hemocyanin of this species, C. maenas hemoglobin does not reside in the hemolymph but is restricted to the gills. Immunofluorescence studies and cell fractioning showed that C. maenas hemoglobin resides in the membrane of the chief cells of the gill. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that a membrane-bound hemoglobin has been identified in eukaryotes. Bioinformatic evaluation suggests that C. maenas hemoglobin is anchored in the membrane by N-myristoylation. Recombinant C. maenas hemoglobin has a hexacoordinate binding scheme at the Fe(2+) and an oxygen affinity of P(50) = 0.5 Torr. A rapid autoxidation rate precludes a function as oxygen carrier. We rather speculate that, analogous to prokaryotic membrane-globins, C. maenas hemoglobin carries out enzymatic functions to protect the lipids in cell membrane from reactive oxygen species. Sequence comparisons and phylogenetic studies suggested that the ancestral arthropod hemoglobin was most likely an N-myristoylated protein that did not have an O(2) supply function. True respiratory hemoglobins of arthropods, however, evolved independently in chironomid midges and branchiopod crustaceans.

Highlights

  • In the animal kingdom, oxygen transport and storage is facilitated by three distinct types of metalloproteins that are classified according to their active sites: hemoglobin (Hb), hemerythrin, and hemocyanin (Hc).2 Hc is a copper-containing respiratory protein in the hemolymph of many arthropod and mollusk species [1, 2]

  • Identification of a Hemoglobin in C. maenas—Systematic BLAST searches for Hb-like sequences were carried out using the databases of expressed sequence tag (EST)

  • The tentative cDNA sequence of C. maenas Hb (CmaHb), which was inferred from the assembled ESTs, covered the complete coding region of 567 bp

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Summary

Introduction

Oxygen transport and storage is facilitated by three distinct types of metalloproteins that are classified according to their active sites: hemoglobin (Hb), hemerythrin, and hemocyanin (Hc).2 Hc is a copper-containing respiratory protein in the hemolymph of many arthropod and mollusk species [1, 2]. Analogous to prokaryotic membrane-globins, C. maenas hemoglobin carries out enzymatic functions to protect the lipids in cell membrane from reactive oxygen species. Sequence comparisons and phylogenetic studies suggested that the ancestral arthropod hemoglobin was most likely an N-myristoylated protein that did not have an O2 supply function.

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