Abstract
With regard to the distal (E7) residue, gastropod sea mollusc contains both types of myoglobin, one with and the other lacking the distal histidine. We have isolated a myoglobin from the radular muscle of Cerithidea rhizophorarum, a small whelk found on the Japanese coast. Unlike Aplysia myoglobin having a single histidine residue at position 95, Cerithidea myoglobin contains three histidines at positions 48, 66 and 98. Moreover, Cerithidea MbO 2 exists as homodimers and is oxidized, not to the usual form of metMb but to the hemichrome monomers. It was also found that the hemichrome monomers thus produced can easily be converted back to the dimerized oxy-form, if the ferric protein was reduced carefully with a slight excess of sodium hydrosulfite. This dimer-monomer conversion coupled with the heme-iron oxidation in Cerithidea myoglobin is very unique, and the distal histidine at position 66 is probably responsible for its reversible formation of hemichrome from the ferric met-form that occurred transiently in due course of the oxidation reaction of Cerithidea MbO 2
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