Abstract

Hemoglobin (Hb)-based oxygen carriers (HBOC) have been engineered to replace or augment the oxygen-carrying capacity of erythrocytes. However, clinical results have generally been disappointing due to adverse side effects linked to intrinsic heme-mediated oxidative toxicity and nitric oxide (NO) scavenging. Redox-active tyrosine residues can facilitate electron transfer between endogenous antioxidants and oxidative ferryl heme species. A suitable residue is present in the α-subunit (Y42) of Hb, but absent from the homologous position in the β-subunit (F41). We therefore replaced this residue with a tyrosine (βF41Y, Hb Mequon). The βF41Y mutation had no effect on the intrinsic rate of lipid peroxidation as measured by conjugated diene and singlet oxygen formation following the addition of ferric(met) Hb to liposomes. However, βF41Y significantly decreased these rates in the presence of physiological levels of ascorbate. Additionally, heme damage in the β-subunit following the addition of the lipid peroxide hydroperoxyoctadecadieoic acid was five-fold slower in βF41Y. NO bioavailability was enhanced in βF41Y by a combination of a 20% decrease in NO dioxygenase activity and a doubling of the rate of nitrite reductase activity. The intrinsic rate of heme loss from methemoglobin was doubled in the β-subunit, but unchanged in the α-subunit. We conclude that the addition of a redox-active tyrosine mutation in Hb able to transfer electrons from plasma antioxidants decreases heme-mediated oxidative reactivity and enhances NO bioavailability. This class of mutations has the potential to decrease adverse side effects as one component of a HBOC product.

Highlights

  • Hemoglobin (Hb)-based oxygen carriers (HBOC, colloquially termed ‘blood substitutes’) have the potential to be transfused in place of packed red blood cells to restore impaired oxygen transport [1]

  • We have shown that myoglobin [15] and the Hb α-subunit [16] have electron transfer pathways that are able to enhance the rate of ferryl reduction by plasma antioxidants

  • This is consistent with our studies in Aplysia myoglobin, where we introduced two novel, fast, tyrosine-based electron transfer pathways [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Hemoglobin (Hb)-based oxygen carriers (HBOC, colloquially termed ‘blood substitutes’) have the potential to be transfused in place of packed red blood cells to restore impaired oxygen transport [1]. HBOC offer the potential advantages of universal compatibility, enhanced shelf life, no risk of disease transmission, enhanced and controllable oxygen delivery, improved rheological properties, and more reliable availability. They are available to individuals who cannot receive conventional blood transfusions for clinical or religious reasons. Olson’s group has been instrumental in introducing a variety of globin mutants to enhance stability, increase affinity, and decrease nitric oxide (NO) dioxygenase activity [2,3]. Nagai and co-workers [4] engineered genetically linked Hb dimers to increase vascular retention time and created new interactions with plasma effectors, such as bicarbonate, to enhance oxygen offloading in tissue [5]. Many groups used novel cysteine residues to create sulfhydryl bridges and stabilize higher order protein structures [6,7]

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