The ligand-binding properties of hemoglobins from two homozygote phenotypes (AA and BB) of water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) have been characterized by equilibrium and kinetic techniques. In the case of the BB phenotype, the two constituent hemoglobins have been purified and separately analysed. Buffalo hemoglobins display the reduced sensitivity to organic phosphates characteristic of ruminant hemoglobins, their physiological effector probably being the chloride ion. In contrast to the other known hemoglobins from ruminants, all the hemoglobins from the water buffalo display a significant temperature sensitivity, the DELTA-H for oxygen binding in the presence of physiological effectors approaching that of human hemoglobin (DELTA-H = -30.5 kJ/mol O2). This discrepancy with the other ruminant hemoglobins (e.g. ox, DELTA-H = -10.4 kJ/mol O2), whose primary structure is very similar to that of buffalo, hemoglobins might be correlated to the different habitat and phylogenetic history of the two subfamilies (Bos and Bubalus) of Bovidae.

Giardina, B., Arevalo, F., Clementi, M.e., Ferrara, L., Di Luccia, A., Lendaro, E., et al. (1992). Evolution of ruminant hemoglobins - Thermodynamic divergence of ox and buffalo hemoglobins. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 204(2), 509-513.

Evolution of ruminant hemoglobins - Thermodynamic divergence of ox and buffalo hemoglobins

1992-01-01

Abstract

The ligand-binding properties of hemoglobins from two homozygote phenotypes (AA and BB) of water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) have been characterized by equilibrium and kinetic techniques. In the case of the BB phenotype, the two constituent hemoglobins have been purified and separately analysed. Buffalo hemoglobins display the reduced sensitivity to organic phosphates characteristic of ruminant hemoglobins, their physiological effector probably being the chloride ion. In contrast to the other known hemoglobins from ruminants, all the hemoglobins from the water buffalo display a significant temperature sensitivity, the DELTA-H for oxygen binding in the presence of physiological effectors approaching that of human hemoglobin (DELTA-H = -30.5 kJ/mol O2). This discrepancy with the other ruminant hemoglobins (e.g. ox, DELTA-H = -10.4 kJ/mol O2), whose primary structure is very similar to that of buffalo, hemoglobins might be correlated to the different habitat and phylogenetic history of the two subfamilies (Bos and Bubalus) of Bovidae.
1992
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore MED/03 - GENETICA MEDICA
English
hemoglobin; article; evolution; nonhuman; oxygen binding; priority journal; temperature sensitivity; thermodynamics; Animal; Hemoglobins; Human; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Kinetics; Oxygen; Phenotype; Ruminants; Thermodynamics
Giardina, B., Arevalo, F., Clementi, M.e., Ferrara, L., Di Luccia, A., Lendaro, E., et al. (1992). Evolution of ruminant hemoglobins - Thermodynamic divergence of ox and buffalo hemoglobins. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 204(2), 509-513.
Giardina, B; Arevalo, F; Clementi, Me; Ferrara, L; Di Luccia, A; Lendaro, E; Bellelli, A; Condo, Sg
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/53023
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