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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The role of hemoglobin heme loss in Heinz body formation: studies with a partially heme-deficient hemoglobin and with genetically unstable hemoglobins

Harry S. Jacob, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 49, Iss: 11, pp 2008-2016
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TLDR
It is concluded that heme loss from mutant beta chains is an early step in Heinz body formation in several of the unstable hemoglobinopathies.
Abstract
A number of mutant hemoglobins are inordinately unstable, denaturing in circulating red cells into Heinz bodies, resulting in congenital Heinz body hemolytic anemia (CHBHA). We have emphasized that most such hemoglobins involve amino acid substitutions at sites neighboring the heme group of the beta-polypeptide chain, and have shown that heme binding to globin is diminished thereby. Thus, hemes were progressively lost from four unstable hemoglobins (Koln, Hammersmith, San Francisco, and Zurich) as they precipitated into Heinz bodies at 50 degrees C. The role of heme loss, especially from beta chains, in Heinz body formation was supported by studies with a hemoglobin synthesized to contain hemes only on its alpha chains (alpha(2) (heme)beta(2) (0)). The behavior of this compound, postulated to be an intermediary in the formation of Heinz bodies, mimicked that of the genetically unstable hemoglobins in several ways: (a) it precipitated at 50 degrees C into typical coccoid Heinz bodies; (b) as also observed with CHBHA hemoglobins this denaturation was virtually prevented by the heme ligands, cyanide or carbon monoxide, which inhibit further heme loss; it was potentiated by oxidation of hemes to the ferri- state, which accentuates heme loss; (c) the thiol groups of alpha(2) (heme)beta(2) (0) were hyperreactive, forming mixed disulfides with glutathione and membrane sulfhydryls at rates similar to those of CHBHA hemoglobins and 10 or more times that of normal hemoglobin A; (d) heme repletion of the protein molecules by the addition of crystalline hemin to either alpha(2) (heme)beta(2) (0) or to the genetically unstable hemoglobins, prevented their precipitation into Heinz bodies and normalized their aberrant electrophoretic behaviors; and (e) during Heinz body formation at 50 degrees C both alpha(2) (heme)beta(2) (0) and the genetically unstable hemoglobins released free alpha(heme)-chains into solution, suggesting that the bulk of the whitish, Heinz body precipitate is naked beta(8)-chains. We conclude that heme loss from mutant beta chains is an early step in Heinz body formation in several of the unstable hemoglobinopathies. The resulting hemedepleted compounds, of which synthetic alpha(2) (heme)beta(2) (0) is a prototype, are unstable, cleaving into beta(0)-chain precipitates (the bulk of the Heinz body material) and soluble, free alpha(heme)-chains (demonstrated previously in hemolysates from many patients with CHBHA).

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Journal ArticleDOI

The red cell.

G. W. G. Bird
- 29 Jan 1972 - 
TL;DR: There is no general agreement about the best therapy of myxoedema coma, but common practice to give thyroxine in doses of 0 05 mg daily by mouth combined with triiodothyronine 20 Fg twice daily by intramuscular injection together with hydrocortisone hemisuccinate 50 mg twice daily.
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Reactions involving superoxide and normal and unstable haemoglobins.

TL;DR: The relative importance of autoxidation and superoxide production compared with haemichrome formation in the haemolytic process associated with these abnormal haemoglobins and thalassaemia is considered.
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Hemin lyses malaria parasites

TL;DR: Malaria parasites isolated from mouse erythrocytes are lysed by ferriprotoporphyrin IX chloride (hemin) or by a chloroquine-hemin complex in amounts that could be produced by release of less than 0.1 percent of the heme in ERYthrocytic hemoglobin.
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Mechanism of hemolysis induced by ferriprotoporphyrin IX.

TL;DR: Observations indicate that FP impairs the erythrocyte's ability to maintain cation gradients and induces hemolysis by a colloid-osmotic mechanism.
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Hemolysis of mouse erythrocytes by ferriprotoporphyrin IX and chloroquine. Chemotherapeutic implications.

TL;DR: Since FP is produced when malaria parasites digest hemoglobin, it may mediate a chemotherapeutic effect of chloroquine by forming a complex with the drug that could enhance the toxicity of FP for biological membranes, including those of the parasite.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The preparation and chemical characteristics of hemoglobin-free ghosts of human erythrocytes

TL;DR: The effects of the ionic strength and pH of the hemolyzing solution on the hemoglobin content of human erythrocyte ghosts were studied in phosphate buffers and suggest an electrophysical interaction of hemoglobin with membrane constituents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on the structure of hemoglobin I. Physicochemical properties of human globin

TL;DR: The most important physicochemical constants of human globin and its coupling capacity for hematin are reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Pathology of Human Haemoglobin

TL;DR: The haemoglobin molecule is insensitive to replacements of most amino-acid residues on its surface, but extremely sensitive to even quite small alterations of internal non-polar contacts, especially those near the haems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and function of haemoglobin

TL;DR: In this paper, a model was constructed by combining information from the three-dimensional Fourier syntheses of horse oxyhaemoglobin at 5·5 A and of sperm whale myoglobin at 1·4 A resolution.
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