The subunit interface of the homodimeric hemoglobin from Scapharca inaequivalvis, HbI, is stabilized by a network of interactions that involve several hydrogen-bonded structural water molecules, a hydrophobic patch, and a single, symmetrical salt bridge between residues Lys-30 and Asp-89. Upon mutation of Lys-30 to Asp, the interface is destabilized markedly. Sedimentation equilibrium and velocity experiments allowed the estimate of the dimerization constants for the unliganded (K(1,2D) = 8 x 10(4) M(-1)) and for the CO-bound (K(1,2L) = 1 x 10(3) m(-1)) and oxygenated (K(1,2L) = 70 m(-1)) derivatives. For the oxygenated derivative, the destabilization of the subunit interface with respect to native HbI corresponds to about 8 kcal/mol, an unexpectedly high figure. In the K30D mutant, at variance with the native protein, oxygen affinity and cooperativity are strongly dependent on protein concentration. At low protein concentrations (e.g. 1.2 x 10(-5) m heme), at which the monomeric species becomes significant also in the unliganded derivative, oxygen affinity increases and cooperativity decreases. At protein concentrations where both derivatives are dimeric (e.g. 3.3 x 10(-3) m heme), both cooperativity and oxygen affinity decrease. Taken together, the experimental data indicate that in the K30D mutant, the mechanism of cooperativity is drastically altered and is driven by a ligand-linked monomer-dimer equilibrium rather than being based on a direct heme-heme communication as in native HbI.