Abstract

The blood clam Barbatia lima subsp. from Amami-Oshima, Japan, expresses three types of haemoglobins in erythrocytes: a tetramer (alpha 2 beta 2), a homodimer (delta 2) and a polymer consisting of two kinds of chains, a 34 kDa two-domain (2D) globin and a delta chain. This is in sharp contrast to the congeneric clams B. reeveana (a North American species) and B. lima from Kochi, Japan, each containing a tetramer and a polymer consisting of the 2D globin, but not the delta chain. We have determined the cDNA-derived amino acid sequences of all four chains, alpha (163 residues), beta (155 residues), delta (152 residues) and 2D (308 residues) of B. lima (Amami-Oshima). The alpha chain has an extremely long N-terminal extension of 20 residues that may form a 'pre-A helix', and this makes the alpha chain the longest known globin. B. lima alpha and beta chains show about 50% sequence identity with the alpha and beta chains, respectively, of tetrameric haemoglobin from a related clam, Anadara trapezia. The B. lima homodimeric delta chain shows 71-74% identity with each of the two domains of the 2D chain, but only 39% identity with the homodimeric gamma chain of Anadara. In addition, the alignment of amino acid sequences of the delta chain and the two domains of the 2D chain revealed that the delta chain lacks one amino acid (Lys) at the C-terminus, suggesting that the C-terminal Lys (codon AAA or AAG) of the two domains of 2D chain could result from the stop codon TAA in the delta chain by nucleotide substitutions. These results, together with the fact that the delta and 2D chains form a polymeric haemoglobin, indicates that the delta chain is the ancestral single-domain globin for the 2D globin. The delta chain is expressed only in B. lima (Amami-Oshima), and appears to be a relic of molecular evolution.

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