Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (mast cell)
14,925 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

35Cl minus-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies indicate that various digests of human hemoglobin with carboxypeptidase A and B, or a combination of the two, may be used for the identification of chloride binding sites. All the digestion products contain, like hemoglobin itself, at least two classes of binding sites, one of high, the others of low affinity. The pH dependence of the excess linewidth of the 35Cl minus NMR signal indicates that in the simple digests with either carboxypeptidase A or B, chloride is bound with high affinity at or near His-beta146-Asp-beta94 and at or near Val-alpha1-Arg-alpha141. The high-affinity sites show, in the case of the simple digests, a strong oxygen linkage which is lost in the forms digested with both carboxypeptidase A and B; this linkage may thus be correlated to the presence of conformational changes. Organic phosphates, like inositol hexaphosphate, show competition for some of the high-affinity chloride binding sites in hemoglobin and in the simple digests. This competition is likewise lost in the doubly digested hemoglobins.
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PMID:Identification of chloride-binding sites in hemoglobin by nuclear-magnetic-resonance quadrupole-relaxation studies of hemoglobin digests. 0 Feb 36

L4, the affinity of hemoglobin for the 4th CO molecule, has been determined for human adult hemoglobin (HbA) as a function of pH and the presence of organic phosphates by measuring the kinetic parameters for the reaction. l'4, the rate of combination of CO with the triliganded molecule, was measured by flash photolysis while l4, the rate of CO dissociation for the ligand-saturated molecule, was measured by ligand replacement. L4 is pH-dependent and affected by 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. Additionally, this pH dependence of the high affinity state is largely eliminated by carboxypeptidase A digestion. L4 for human fetal hemoglobin (HbF) in phosphate buffers was also determined and found to be pH-dependent. These results cannot be reconciled within the framework of the two-state allosteric model. Additional structures in the conformational equilibrium due to either intermediates in the T to R transition or two or more R states must exist.
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PMID:Kinetic studies on the binding affinity of human hemoglobin for the 4th carbon monoxide molecule, L4. 1 Mar 2

A mass spectrometric method was developed to determine pH-dependent hydrogen-deuterium exchange at the C-2 position of the imidazole ring of histidine, after converting the amino acid to the methylthiohydantoin derivative. The amount of deuterium exchange in N-acetyl-histidine estimated by the present method was confirmed to be in good agreement with that determined by NMR spectrometry. N-Acetylhistidine was deuterated at various pH's. From the amount of deuterium exchange, a pseudo-first order rate constant (kpsi) was calculated. A pKa value of 7.2 for the amino acid was obtained from the relation between kpsi and pH. This method was applied to estimate the pKa value of beta-146 histidine in human hemoglobin. Human hemoglobin deuterated at various pH's was digested with carboxypeptidase A [EC 3.4.12.2] to release the beta-146 histidine. The amount of deuterium exchange in the isolated histidine was determined to obtain kpsi. From these measurements pKa values of 7.0 for the histidine in oxyhemoglobin and of 8.2 for that in deoxyhemoglobin were found at 36.5 degrees, respectively.
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PMID:Studies on the heterotropic interaction of hemoglobin. I. Mass spectrometric method for determination of the pKa of the beta-146 histidine residue in human hemoglobin. 1 48

The O2 binding properties of sulfhemoglobin were studied. The oxygen tension required for half-saturation of sulfhemoglobin is more than 2 orders of magnitude higher than that for hemoglobin A. The binding of O2 exhibits an alkaline Bohr effect larger than that observed for hemoglobin, yet the Hill number is unity. From the Bohr titration curve, 0.68 proton is released during O2 binding at 0 degrees C. Sulfhemoglobin prepared from carboxypeptidase A-treated hemoglobin has an affinity for O2 which is about the same as that of sulfhemoglobin at the theoretical limit of the Bohr titration curve. Like its carboxypeptidase A-treated hemoglobin precursor, this sulfhemoglobin does not bind O2 cooperatively. Thus, sulfhemoglobin appears to be in a high affinity form at alkaline pH and a low affinity form at acid pH, similar to hemoglobin A. These results demonstrate that the magnitude of the Hill number is not always an indicator of the interaction between oxygen binding and other functions in a hemoglobin.
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PMID:The reversible binding of oxygen to sulfhemoglobin. 2 95

The reactive sulfhydryls of human adult and fetal hemoglobin and the single sulfhydryl of isolated gamma chains have been spin labeled with N-(1-oxyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-3-pyrrolidinyl) iodoacetamide. Similar electron paramagnetic spectral differences between oxy- and deoxy-modified hemoglobins were observed for both these hemoglobins and for the isolated chains, indicating that ligand-induced conformational changes occur in isolated hemoglobin subunits as well as intact hemoglobin tetramers. Ligand induced changes in the reactivity of p-hydroxymercuribenzoate with the sulfhydryl groups of both intact hemoglobins and isolated subunits, observed by McDonald and Noble (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 3161-3165), led them to draw a similar conclusion. Following carboxypeptidase A digestion of these modified hemoglobins and gamma chains, a procedure which specifically removes the two C-terminal residues of the beta or gamma chains, spectral differences between the liganded and unliganded spin-labeled derivatives still persisted. However, the magnitude of this difference was not only more reduced in the case of the hemoglobins than in that of the subunits but the spectra of both the oxy and deoxy derivatives of the hemoglobins were characteristic of the oxy derivative of a cooperative tetrameric hemoglobin. These findings support the premise that the COOH-terminal end of the beta or gamma chain contributes, although possibly to different extents, to the spectral differences exhibited by both the spin-labeled hemoglobins and chains.
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PMID:Ligand-induced conformational changes in spin label-modified human hemoglobins and chains and their carboxypeptidase A-digested derivatives. 18 24

The hemoglobin of the flatworm Dicrocoelium dendriticum, a lanceolate fluke which infests the hepatic ducts of certain mammals, has been isolated by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. The molecular weight of the denatured protein was found to be 15500, a value in the same range as hemoglobin subunits. The fact that the native hemoglobin has an apparent molecular weight of 22000 in 0.01 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, suggests limited aggregation. The protein contains, as all other myoglobins and hemoglobins, one molecule of non-covalently associated ferroprotoporphyrin IX per polypeptide chain. It forms the same ligand derivatives with very similar spectral properties as vertebrate hemoglobins. The high oxygen affinity (p50 is 0.07--0.1 mmHg or 9.3--13.3 Pa at 20 degrees C and pH 7.0) and the absence of heme-heme interaction of (Hill coefficient nH=1.0) are properties which this heme protein shares with other monomeric hemoglobins from invertebrate and lower vertebrate organisms. The native hemoglobin exists in two forms, having isoelectric points of 4.51 and 4.53, which do not differ in their amino-acid compositions. Dansylation indicated that the amino-terminal amino-acid residue is alanine. The carboxy-terminal sequence, determined by carboxypeptidase A digestion of the globin, is -His-Ala-Leu.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the hemoglobin from the lanceolate fluke Dicrocoelium dendriticum. 68 24

The various peptidases secreted by such exocrine tissues as gastric mucosa, pancreas and prostate are usually determined by catalytic methods. Another approach utilizes immunoassay. Endopeptidases were formerly assayed with protein substrates such as hemoglobin and albumin. These techniques are increasingly replaced by more specific ones using artificial peptide derivatives as substrates, some of which allow an increase in absorbance or fluorescence to be continuously recorded. The presently available methods of assaying pepsin, pancreatic trypsin, trypsinogen and carboxypeptidase A, enterokinase and several peptidases of human sperm are reviewed.
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PMID:The assay of exocrinous peptidases in clinical chemistry. 77 94

An asymptomatic woman was found to have a compensated hemolytic state due to an unstable hemoglobin variant, comprising 35% of the total. Peptide maps of tryptic digests of the abnormal beta chain were identical to those of beta A except that tryptic peptide 15 (Tyr-His-COOH) was absent and a new peptide was detected, containing equivalent amounts of Ser, Ile, Thr, and Lys. Its sequence was determined by manual Edman degradation. An additional hydrophobic peptide isolated by counter-current distribution contained: Asx, Ser, Ala, Tyr, 2 Phe, and 3 Leu. Its sequence was determined on an automatic solid phase sequencer. Digestion with carboxypeptidase A confirmed the C-terminal sequence. Hemoglobin Cranston has an elongated beta chain with the following structure: (see article). This variant is the first "adult" human hemoglobin known to contain isoleucine. It is likely that hemoglobin Cranston arose because of a nonhomologous crossover of two normal beta chain genes, probably during meiosis, with the insertion of two nucleotides (AG) at position 144, resulting in a frame shift. Hemoglobin Cranston provides new information on the structure of the beta chain gene as well as an explanation of both the structure and genetic basis of hemoglobin Tak, the only other elongated beta chain variant that has been described.
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PMID:Hemoglobin Cranston, an unstable variant having an elongated beta chain due to nonhomologous crossover between two normal beta chain genes. 105 49

Utilising the homology between goose alpha chain hemoglobin and chicken, the primary arrangement of the amino acid residues of the alpha chain (major component) of goose hemoglobin is presented. Data were obtained from amino acid analysis of the isolated alpha chain and of tryptic peptides of the chain. Their chemical structure was established by Edman degradation, carboxypeptidase A and B and leucineaminopeptidase digestion.
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PMID:[Primary structure of the alpha chain of the major component of goose hemoglobins (Anser anser)]. 118 14

When embryonic stem cells are cultured directly in semisolid media (methyl cellulose), they proliferate and differentiate to generate colonies known as embryoid bodies (EBs). These EBs consist of differentiated cells from a number of lineages including those of the hematopoietic system. Following 10 days of culture in the presence of 10% fetal calf serum, more than 40% of all EBs from three different ES cell lines, CCEG2, D3 and SQ1.2S8 contained visible erythropoietic cells (i.e. red with hemoglobin). Beta H1 (z globin) mRNA is detectable in EBs within 5 days of differentiation, whilst beta(maj)-globin RNA appears by day 6. In the presence of erythropoietin (Epo), the frequency of EBs with erythropoietic activity increases to greater than 60%; Epo also prolongs this erythropoietic activity. Interleukin-3 (IL-3) does not significantly increase the frequency of EBs that contain erythroid cells, but increases slightly the number of erythropoietic cells associated with them. In the presence of IL-3, in addition to cells of the erythroid lineage, macrophages, mast cells and in some instances neutrophils are found within differentiating EBs. The development of macrophages is significantly enhanced by the addition of IL-3 alone or in combination with IL-1 and M-CSF or GM-CSF. When well-differentiated EBs are allowed to attach onto tissue-culture plates and grown in the presence of IL-3, a long-term output of cells from the mast cell lineage is observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Multiple hematopoietic lineages develop from embryonic stem (ES) cells in culture. 189 64


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