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Thursday, December 04, 2008

Hemerythrin

Hemerythrin is a protein responsible for oxygen transportation in the marine invertebrate phyla of sipuniculids, priapulids, brachiopods, and in a single annelid worm, magelona. It is essentially colorless when deoxygenated, but turns a violet-pink in the oxygenated state.

Hemerythrin is not, as the name might suggest, a heme. The "heme" was at first applied to any oxygen-carrying proteins, such as hemoglobin, and when hemoglobin was analyzed, the heme structure was named for the iron-porphyrin cofactor in the transport protein (globin being a general term for a globular protein). Later, after hemerythrin was named, it was discovered that not every oxygen-carrying protein has a heme prosthetic group.

As it turns out the oxygen binding site is a binuclear iron center, the irons connect through a μ-oxo bridge. The irons themselves are coordinated to the protein through the carboxylate side chains of a glutamate and aspartate group, and five histidines.



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