Abstract
High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy at 250 MHz has been used to titrate 22 individual surface histidyl residues (11 per alpha beta dimer) of human normal adult hemoglobin in both the deoxy and the carbon monoxy forms. The proton resonances of beta 2, beta 143, and beta 146 histidyl residues are assigned by a parallel 1H NMR titration of appropriate mutant and chemically modified hemoglobins. The pK values of the 22 histidyl residues investigated are found to range from 6.35 to 8.07 in the deoxy form and from 6.20 to 7.87 in the carbon monoxy form, in the presence of 0.1 M Bis-Tris or 0.1 M Tris buffer in D2O with chloride ion concentrations varying from 5 to 60 mM at 27 degrees C. Four histidyl residues in the deoxy form and one histidyl residue in the carbon monoxy form are found to have proton nuclear magnetic resonance titration curves that deviate greatly from that predicted by the simple proton dissociation equilibrium of a single ionizable group. The proton nuclear magnetic resonance data are used to ascertain the role of several surface histidyl residues in the Bohr effect of hemoglobin under the above-mentioned experimental conditions. Under these experimental conditions, we have found that (i) the beta 146 histidyl residues do not change their electrostatic environments significantly upon binding of ligand to deoxyhemoglobin and, thus, their contribution to the Bohr effect is negligible, (ii) the beta 2 histidyl residues have a negative contribution to the Bohr effect, and (iii) the total contribution of the 22 histidyl residues investigated here to the Bohr effect is, in magnitude, comparable to the Bohr effect observed experimentally. These results suggest that the molecular mechanism of the Bohr effect proposed by Perutz [Perutz, M.F. (1970) Nature (London) 228, 726-739] is not unique and that the detailed mechanism depends on experimental conditions, such as the solvent composition.
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