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Friday, March 17, 2017

Myoglobin

Myoglobin is a cytoplasmic hemoprotein composed by a single polypeptide chain of 154 amino acids. It is expressed solely in cardiac myocytes and oxidative skeletal muscle fibers. Myoglobin was so named because of its functional and structural similarity to hemoglobin. Like hemoglobin, myoglobin binds reversibly to O2 and thus may facilitate the transport of O2 from red blood cells to the mitochondria during periods of increased metabolic activity or serve as an O 2 reservoir during hypoxia or anoxia.The structure of myoglobin was first delineated by John Kendrew more than 40 years ago and subsequent work has shown that it is a polypeptide chain consisting of eight α-helices. It binds oxygen to its heme residue, a porphyrin ring with an iron ion. The polypeptide chain is folded and packs the heme prosthetic group, positioning it between two histidine, His64 and His93 residues. The iron ion interacts with six ligands, four of which are supplied by the nitrogen atoms of the four pyrrhols and share a common plane. The side chain imidazole of His93, provides the fifth ligand, stabilizing the heme group and slightly displacing the iron ion out of the heme plane. The position of the sixth ligand, in deoximoglobin, serves as the binding site for O2, as well as for other potential ligands, such as CO or NO. When O2 binds, the iron ion, it is partially drawn back toward the porphyrin plane. Although this shift is of little importance in the function of monomeric myoglobin, it provides the basis for the conformational changes that underlie the allosteric properties of tetrameric hemoglobin. In addition, studies using X-ray diffraction and xenon binding techniques have identified four highly conserved internal cavities within the myoglobin molecule that can help target molecules to bind to the heme residue.Related to its role as an O2 reservoir, myoglobin also functions as an intracellular pO2 buffer (partial pressure of O2). Similarly to the role of creatine phosphokinase, which works to buffer ATP concentrations when muscle activity increases, myoglobin works to buffer O2 concentrations. As a result, the intracellular concentration of O2 remains relatively constant and homogeneous, despite increases in O2 flow from the capillaries to the mitochondria, induced by physical activity.

Text written by:
Ana Rita Cardoso
João Faria
Joel Mateus
Pedro Desport
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3 comments:

  1. prof premraj pushpakaran writes -- 2017 marks the centenary year of John Cowdery Kendrew!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. important mcq
    https://www.rrbquiz.info/2019/09/top-30-biochemistry-multiple-choice.html

    ReplyDelete
  3. nice blog....... i have to create a blog, its my assignment.... gonna take help from here

    ReplyDelete