Structure and Properties of Hemoglobin Carlem, a Human Hemoglobin Variant with Amino Acid Substitutions in 2 Residues of the β-Polypeptide Chain

Robert M. Bookchin(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Ronald L. Nagel(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Helen M. Ranney(Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
January 1, 1967
Cited by 159Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract A new sickling hemoglobin variant designated hemoglobin Charlem (Hb Ch) migrated slightly anodally to the position of hemoglobin C on electrophoresis at pH 8.6, and has been shown to have the structure αa2 β6 glu → val, 73 asp → asn2. Hemoglobin Ch comprised 40% of the hemoglobin in individuals of two generations of an American Negro family and is the first instance in which two amino acid substitutions in a single polypeptide chain have been defined in a human hemoglobin variant. Hemoglobin Ch appeared not to differ significantly from Hb A in its oxygen equilibria, ultraviolet spectra of the oxy and deoxy forms, and titratable sulfhydryl groups. Probably by virtue of its β6 val substitution, Hb Ch shared with Hb S (αa2 β6 glu → val2) the properties of erythrocyte sickling and relative insolubility and gelation of the deoxyhemoglobin. However, gelation experiments suggested that the β73 asn substitution resulted in a decrease in the intermolecular interactions of deoxyhemoglobin Ch as compared with deoxyhemoglobin S, and implied conformational differences between the two deoxyhemoglobins.


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