Hemoglobin Hiroshima (β143 histidine → aspartic acid): a newly identified fast moving beta chain variant associated with increased oxygen affinity and compensatory erythremia
Open Access
- 1 March 1969
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 48 (3), 525-535
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci106010
Abstract
During a survey for hemoglobinopathies in over 9000 residents of Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan, a fast moving hemoglobin was identified in eight members of three generations in a Japanese family. The abnormal hemoglobin, named Hb Hiroshima, constitutes about 50% of the total hemoglobin in hemolysates from the carriers who have a mild erythremia but are otherwise apparently clinically unaffected. All preparations of Hb Hiroshima have increased affinity for oxygen, by either tonometric or oxygen electrode determinations. At pH 7.0, the oxygen pressure, P50 required to half saturate an unfractionated hemolysate from a carrier was one-half that of Hb A, and the P50 of a purified sample containing no Hb A was one-fourth that of Hb A. The pH dependence of the oxygen equilibrium (Bohr effect) is below normal, as shown by the absolute value of the Bohr effect factor which is about half that of Hb A, in the pH range between 7.0 and 7.4. The Hill constant, n, for Hb Hiroshima between pH 7.0 and 7.4 is 2-2.4, compared to 2.8-3 for Hb A under the same conditions, indicating reduction of, but not complete abolition of heme-heme interaction. Urea dissociation and canine hybridization tests located the biochemical lesion in the beta chain. Fingerprints (Ingram), carboxypeptidase digestion, and amino acid analysis demonstrated that the substitution was at residue 143 in the beta chain, where histidine was replaced by aspartic acid. In contrast to other recently described high oxygen affinity mutants that show intact Bohr effects, all three of the major characteristics of the reversible combination of hemoglobin with oxygen (oxygen equilibrium, heme-heme interaction, and pH dependence) are affected in Hb Hiroshima. A tentative interpretation of these effects, relating structure to function, is offered in terms of recently developed models of normal hemoglobin.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reciprocal binding of oxygen and diphosphoglycerate by human hemoglobin.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1968
- Hemoglobin Yakima: I. Clinical and Biochemical Studies*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1967
- Hemoglobin Yakima: II. High Blood Oxygen Affinity Associated with Compensatory Erythrocytosis and Normal Hemodynamics*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1967
- Structure and function of haemoglobinJournal of Molecular Biology, 1967
- Whole blood oxygen affinities of women with various hemoglobinopathiesAmerican Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1967
- Polycythemia associated with a hemoglobinopathy.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1966
- A NEW METHOD FOR PREPARATION OF ALPHA AND BETA SUBUNITS OF HUMAN HEMOGLOBIN1965
- OXYGEN EQUILIBRIA OF HEMOGLOBIN ALPHAA AND OF HEMOGLOBIN RECONSTITUTED FROM HEMOGLOBINS ALPHAA AND H1965
- Estimation of Small Percentages of Fœtal HæmoglobinNature, 1959
- FURTHER STUDIES ON THE OXYGEN EQUILIBRIUM OF HEMOGLOBINJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1950