Kinetics of ligand binding to haemoproteins
- PMID: 2185064
- DOI: 10.1042/bst0180001
Kinetics of ligand binding to haemoproteins
Abstract
A mass of experimental data has been accumulated in the 65 years since Hartridge and Roughton made the first measurement of the rapid reaction of haemoglobin with O2 in solution on a millisecond time scale, at first by flow-mixing methods, and, for 30 years or so, by flash photolysis. Technical advances, particularly in lasers, have allowed increasingly rapid reactions to be followed and the fastest reactions now observed have half-times conveniently measured in pico-seconds. The measurements were used at first to discuss the physiology of gas transport and to describe co-operativity in haemoglobin. More recently, the process of ligand binding has been dissected into intramolecular and intermolecular components. Relating the various rates to the abundance of structural information on crystals is so difficult that the work has barely begun, but the combination of kinetic measurements with genetic engineering and crystallography has promise, as well as problems, for the future.
Similar articles
-
Measurement of distal histidine coordination equilibrium and kinetics in hexacoordinate hemoglobins.Methods Enzymol. 2008;436:359-78. doi: 10.1016/S0076-6879(08)36020-0. Methods Enzymol. 2008. PMID: 18237643
-
A model for ligand binding to hexacoordinate hemoglobins.Biochemistry. 2001 May 22;40(20):6155-63. doi: 10.1021/bi0100790. Biochemistry. 2001. PMID: 11352753
-
Slow ligand binding kinetics dominate ferrous hexacoordinate hemoglobin reactivities and reveal differences between plants and other species.Biochemistry. 2006 Jan 17;45(2):561-70. doi: 10.1021/bi051902l. Biochemistry. 2006. PMID: 16401085
-
Characterization of ligand migration mechanisms inside hemoglobins from the analysis of geminate rebinding kinetics.Methods Enzymol. 2008;437:329-45. doi: 10.1016/S0076-6879(07)37017-1. Methods Enzymol. 2008. PMID: 18433636 Review.
-
Can a two-state MWC allosteric model explain hemoglobin kinetics?Biochemistry. 1997 May 27;36(21):6511-28. doi: 10.1021/bi9619177. Biochemistry. 1997. PMID: 9174369 Review.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources