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Myoglobin Information

Myoglobin is an iron- and oxygen-binding protein found in the muscle tissue of vertebrates in general and in almost all mammals. It is related to hemoglobin, which is the iron- and oxygen-binding protein in blood, specifically in the red blood cells. The only time myoglobin is found in the bloodstream is when it is released following muscle injury. It is an abnormal finding, and can be diagnostically relevant when found in blood. [2]

Myoglobin (abbreviated Mb) is a single-chain globular protein of 153[3] or 154[4] amino acids, containing a heme (iron-containing porphyrin) prosthetic group in the center around which the remaining apoprotein folds. It has eight alpha helices and a hydrophobic core. It has a molecular weight of 17,699 daltons (with heme), and is the primary oxygen-carrying pigment of muscle tissues.[4] Unlike the blood-borne hemoglobin, to which it is structurally related,[5] this protein does not exhibit cooperative binding of oxygen, since positive cooperativity is a property of multimeric/oligomeric proteins only. High concentrations of myoglobin in muscle cells allow organisms to hold their breaths longer. Diving mammals such as whales and seals have muscles with particularly high myoglobin abundance.[2]

Myoglobin was the first protein to have its three-dimensional structure revealed.[6] In 1958, John Kendrew and associates successfully determined the structure of myoglobin by high-resolution X-ray crystallography.[7] For this discovery, John Kendrew shared the 1962 Nobel Prize in chemistry with Max Perutz.[8] Despite being one of the most studied proteins in biology, its true physiological function is not yet conclusively established: mice genetically engineered to lack myoglobin are viable, but showed a 30% reduction in cardiac systolic output. They adapted to this deficiency through hypoxic genetic mechanisms and increased vasodilation.[9] In humans myoglobin is encoded by the MB gene.[10]

Contents

Meat color

An X-ray diffraction image for the protein myoglobin

Myoglobin forms pigments responsible for making meat red. The color that meat takes is partly determined by the oxidation states of the iron atom in myoglobin and the oxygen species attached to it. When meat is in its raw state, the iron atom is in the +2 oxidation state, and is bound to a dioxygen molecule (O2). Meat cooked well done is brown because the iron atom is now in the +3 oxidation state, having lost an electron, and is now coordinated by a water molecule. Under some conditions, meat can also remain pink all through cooking, despite being heated to high temperatures. If meat has been exposed to nitrites, it will remain pink because the iron atom is bound to NO, nitric oxide (true of, e.g., corned beef or cured hams). Grilled meats can also take on a pink "smoke ring" that comes from the iron binding to a molecule of carbon monoxide.[11] Raw meat packed in a carbon monoxide atmosphere also shows this same pink "smoke ring" due to the same coordination chemistry. Notably, the surface of this raw meat also displays the pink color, which is usually associated in consumers' minds with fresh meat. This artificially-induced pink color can persist in the meat for a very long time, reportedly up to one year.[12] Hormel and Cargill are both reported to use this meat-packing process, and meat treated this way has been in the consumer market since 2003.[13] Myoglobin is found in Type I muscle, Type II A and Type II B, but most texts consider myoglobin not to be found in smooth muscle.

Role in disease

Myoglobin is released from damaged muscle tissue (rhabdomyolysis), which has very high concentrations of myoglobin. The released myoglobin is filtered by the kidneys but is toxic to the renal tubular epithelium and so may cause acute renal failure.[14] It is not the myoglobin itself that is toxic (it is a protoxin) but the ferrihemate portion that is dissociated from myoglobin in acidic environments (e.g., acidic urine, lysosomes).

Myoglobin is a sensitive marker for muscle injury, making it a potential marker for heart attack in patients with chest pain.[15] However, elevated myoglobin has low specificity for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and thus CK-MB, cTnT, ECG, and clinical signs should be taken into account to make the diagnosis.

Structure and bonding

Myoglobin contains a porphyrin ring with an iron center. There is a proximal histidine group attached directly to the iron center, and a distal histidine group on the opposite face, not bonded to the iron.

Many functional models of myoglobin have been studied. One of the most important is that of picket fence porphyrin by James Collman. This model was used to show the importance of the distal prosthetic group. It serves three functions:

  1. To form hydrogen bonds with the dioxygen moiety, increasing the O2 binding constant
  2. To prevent the binding of carbon monoxide, whether from within or without the body. Carbon monoxide binds to iron in an end-on fashion, and is hindered by the presence of the distal histidine, which forces it into a bent conformation. CO binds to heme 23,000 times better than O2, but only 200 times better in hemoglobin and myoglobin. Oxygen binds in a bent fashion, which can fit with the distal histidine.[16]
  3. To prevent irreversible dimerization of the oxymyoglobin with another deoxymyoglobin species

See also

References

  1. ^ PDB 1MBO; Takano T (March 1977). "Structure of myoglobin refined at 2.0 Å resolution. II. Structure of deoxymyoglobin from sperm whale". J. Mol. Biol. 110 (3): 569–84. doi:10.1016/S0022-2836(77)80112-5. PMID 845960.
  2. ^ a b Nelson, D. L.; Cox, M. M. (2000). Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry (3rd ed.). New York: Worth Publishers. p. 206. ISBN 071676203X.
  3. ^ Hendgen-Cotta, U.; Kelm, M.; Rassaf, T. (2009). "A highlight of myoglobin diversity: the nitrite reductase activity during myocardial ischemia-reperfusion". Nitric oxide : biology and chemistry / official journal of the Nitric Oxide Society 22 (2): 75–82. doi:10.1016/j.niox.2009.10.003. PMID 19836457.
  4. ^ a b George A. Ordway and Daniel J. Garry (2004). "Myoglobin: an essential hemoprotein in striated muscle". Journal of Experimental Biology 207 (Pt 20): 3441–6. doi:10.1242/jeb.01172. PMID 15339940.
  5. ^ Harvey Lodish, Arnold Berk, Lawrence S. Zipursky, Paul Matsudaira, David Baltimore and James Darnell (2000). "Evolutionary tree showing the globin protein family members myoglobin and hemoglobin". Molecular Cell Biology (4th ed.). W. H. Freeman. ISBN 0-7167-3136-3. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Search&db=books&doptcmdl=GenBookHL&term=myoglobin+AND+mcb%5Bbook%5D+AND+105134%5Buid%5D&rid=mcb.figgrp.540.
  6. ^ (U.S.) National Science Foundation: Protein Data Bank Chronology (Jan. 21, 2004). Retrieved 3.17.2010
  7. ^ JC Kendrew, G Bodo, HM Dintzis, RG Parrish, H Wyckoff, and DC Phillips (1958). "A Three-Dimensional Model of the Myoglobin Molecule Obtained by X-Ray Analysis". Nature 181 (4610): 662–6. Bibcode 1958Natur.181..662K. doi:10.1038/181662a0. PMID 13517261.
  8. ^ The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1962
  9. ^ Mammen PP, Kanatous SB, Yuhanna IS, Shaul PW, Garry MG, Balaban RS, Garry DJ (2003). "Hypoxia-induced left ventricular dysfunction in myoglobin-deficient mice". American Journal of Physiology. Heart and Circulatory Physiology 285 (5): H2132–41. doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00147.2003. PMID 12881221.
  10. ^ Akaboshi E (1985). "Cloning of the human myoglobin gene". Gene 33 (3): 241–9. doi:10.1016/0378-1119(85)90231-8. PMID 2989088.
  11. ^ McGee, H (2004). On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen. New York: Scribner. p. 148. ISBN 0-684-80001-2.
  12. ^ Minneapolis Star Tribune, Nov. 14, 2007 http://www.startribune.com/10223/story/1548852.html
  13. ^ Minneapolis Star Tribune, October 31, 2007 http://www.startribune.com/535/story/1518775.html
  14. ^ Toshio Naka, Daryl Jones, Ian Baldwin, Nigel Fealy, Samantha Bates, Hermann Goehl, Stanislao Morgera, Hans H. Neumayer and Rinaldo Bellomo (2005). "Myoglobin clearance by super high-flux hemofiltration in a case of severe rhabdomyolysis: a case report". Critical Care 9 (2): R90–5. doi:10.1186/cc3034. PMC 1175920. PMID 15774055. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=1175920.
  15. ^ M. Weber, M. Rau, K. Madlener, A. Elsaesser, D. Bankovic, V. Mitrovic and C. Hamm (2005). "Diagnostic utility of new immunoassays for the cardiac markers cTnI, myoglobin and CK-MB mass". Clinical Biochemistry 38 (11): 1027–30. doi:10.1016/j.clinbiochem.2005.07.011. PMID 16125162.
  16. ^ J. P. Collman, J. I. Brauman, T. R. Halbert, and K. S. Suslick (1976). "Nature of O2 and CO binding to metalloporphyrins and heme proteins". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 73 (10): 3333–7. doi:10.1073/pnas.73.10.3333. PMC 431107. PMID 1068445. http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/73/10/3333.

Further reading

External links

Proteins: hemeproteins
Globins
Hemoglobin
Subunits

Alpha locus on 16: α (HBA1, HBA2) · ζ (HBZ) · θ (HBQ1) · μ (HBM)

Beta locus on 11: β (HBB) · δ (HBD) · γ (HBG1, HBG2) · ε (HBE1)
Tetramers

stages of development: HbA2β2) · HbA22δ2) · HbF/Fetal2γ2) · HbE Gower 22ε2) · HbE Gower 12ε2)

pathology: HbH4) · Barts4) · HbS2βS2) · HbC2βC2) · HbE2βE2)
Compounds Carboxyhemoglobin · Carbaminohemoglobin · Oxyhemoglobin/Deoxyhemoglobin · Sulfhemoglobin
Other human Glycosylated hemoglobin · Methemoglobin
Nonhuman Chlorocruorin · Erythrocruorin
Other

human: Myoglobin (Metmyoglobin) · Neuroglobin · Cytoglobin

plant: Leghemoglobin
Other Cytochrome (Cytochrome b, Cytochrome P450) · Hemocyanin · Methemalbumin
see also

: MYL

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Medical test: Serology, reference range: Clinical biochemistry blood tests (including BMP, CMP) (CPT 82000-84999)
Fluid/electrolytes

electrolytes (Na+/K+, Cl-/HCO3-) · renal function, BUN-to-creatinine ratio (BUN/Creatinine) · Ca

derived values: Plasma osmolality · Serum osmolal gap
Acid-base Arterial blood gas · Base excess · Anion gap · CO2 content
Nutrition Iron tests: Transferrin saturation = Serum iron / Total iron-binding capacity; Ferritin · Transferrin · Transferrin receptor
Endocrine

ACTH stimulation test · Thyroid function tests (TSH)

Blood sugar: Glucose test · C-peptide · Fructosamine · Glycated hemoglobin
Metabolic Blood lipids
Cardiovascular Cardiac marker: Troponin test · CPK-MB test · LDH · Myoglobin · Glycogen phosphorylase isoenzyme BB
Digestive

Liver function tests: protein tests (Human serum albumin, Serum total protein) · ALP · transaminases (ALT, AST, AST/ALT ratio) · Bilirubin (Unconjugated, Conjugated)

Amylase · Lipase (Pancreatic lipase)

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PDB gallery
1m6c: V68N MYOGLOBIN WITH CO
1m6m: V68N MET MYOGLOBIN
1mdn: WILD TYPE MYOGLOBIN WITH CO
1mnh: INTERACTIONS AMONG RESIDUES CD3, E7, E10 AND E11 IN MYOGLOBINS: ATTEMPTS TO SIMULATE THE O2 AND CO BINDING PROPERTIES OF APLYSIA MYOGLOBIN
1mni: ALTERATION OF AXIAL COORDINATION BY PROTEIN ENGINEERING IN MYOGLOBIN. BIS-IMIDAZOLE LIGATION IN THE HIS64-->VAL(SLASH)VAL68-->HIS DOUBLE MUTANT
1mnj: INTERACTIONS AMONG RESIDUES CD3, E7, E10 AND E11 IN MYOGLOBINS: ATTEMPTS TO SIMULATE THE O2 AND CO BINDING PROPERTIES OF APLYSIA MYOGLOBIN
1mnk: INTERACTIONS AMONG RESIDUES CD3, E7, E10 AND E11 IN MYOGLOBINS: ATTEMPTS TO SIMULATE THE O2 AND CO BINDING PROPERTIES OF APLYSIA MYOGLOBIN
1mno: V68N MYOGLOBIN OXY FORM
1mwc: WILD TYPE MYOGLOBIN WITH CO
1mwd: WILD TYPE DEOXY MYOGLOBIN
1myg: HIGH RESOLUTION X-RAY STRUCTURES OF PIG METMYOGLOBIN AND TWO CD3 MUTANTS MB(LYS45-> ARG) AND MB(LYS45-> SER)
1myh: HIGH RESOLUTION X-RAY STRUCTURES OF PIG METMYOGLOBIN AND TWO CD3 MUTANTS MB(LYS45-> ARG) AND MB(LYS45-> SER)
1myi: HIGH RESOLUTION X-RAY STRUCTURES OF PIG METMYOGLOBIN AND TWO CD3 MUTANTS MB(LYS45-> ARG) AND MB(LYS45-> SER)
1myj: DISTAL POLARITY IN LIGAND BINDING TO MYOGLOBIN: STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF A THREONINE68(E11) MUTANT
1pmb: THE DETERMINATION OF THE CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF RECOMBINANT PIG MYOGLOBIN BY MOLECULAR REPLACEMENT AND ITS REFINEMENT
1yca: DISTAL POCKET POLARITY IN LIGAND BINDING TO MYOGLOBIN: DEOXY AND CARBONMONOXY FORMS OF A THREONINE68 (E11) MUTANT INVESTIGATED BY X-RAY CRYSTALLOGRAPHY AND INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY
1ycb: DISTAL POCKET POLARITY IN LIGAND BINDING TO MYOGLOBIN: DEOXY AND CARBONMONOXY FORMS OF A THREONINE68 (E11) MUTANT INVESTIGATED BY X-RAY CRYSTALLOGRAPHY AND INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY
2mm1: X-RAY CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF A RECOMBINANT HUMAN MYOGLOBIN MUTANT AT 2.8 ANGSTROMS RESOLUTION

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Noun

Myoglobin Wikipedia myoglobin (countable and uncountable; plural myoglobins)
  1. (biochemistry) A small globular protein, containing a heme group, that carries oxygen to muscles
Anagrams
from: Wiktionary: myoglobin,
Mon Oct 10 05:13:10 2011