Abstract

The formation constants of the azide and hydroxyl ion complexes of sperm whale metmyoglobin have been measured as a function of pH and temperature. The observed behaviour is that of a typical methaemoglobin in that small variations with pH of the free energy of complex formation are accompanied by much larger compensating enthalpy and entropy changes, –ΔH° passing through a maximum. The behaviour of hydroxyl ion as a ligand is different from that for other ligands studied in this series, –ΔH° passing through a minimum at a pH close to that for which –ΔH° is a maximum for other ligands. The amount of hydrogen ion taken up upon reaction of metmyoglobin with azide ion has been measured as a function of pH and ionic strength. Using an expression for the activity coefficient of the metmyoglobin based on a dielectric cavity model for the protein the variation of log KL with pH at I= 0·01 is shown to be consistent with the amount of hydrogen ion taken up.

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