Use of ionic and zwitterionic (Tris/BisTris and HEPES) buffers in studies on hemoglobin function

1992 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 1611-1615 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Weber

The functional characteristics of hemoglobin (Hb) depend on oxygenation-linked proton and anion binding and thus on solvent buffer groups and ionic composition. This study compares the oxygenation properties of human Hb in ionic [tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris) and BisTris] buffers with those in zwitterionic N-2-hydroxy-ethylpiperazine-N′-2-ethanesulfonic acid (HEPES) buffer under strictly controlled chloride concentrations at different pH values, two temperatures, and in the absence and presence of the erythrocytic cofactor, 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (DPG). In contrast to earlier studies (carried out at the same or different chloride concentrations) it shows only small buffer effects that are manifested at low chloride concentration and high pH. These observations suggest chloride binding to the Tris buffers, which reduces the interaction with specific chloride binding sites in the Hb. The findings indicate that HEPES allows for more accurate assessment of Hb-oxygen affinity and its anion and temperature sensitivities than ionic buffers and advocates standard use of HEPES in studies on Hb function. Precise oxygen affinities of Hb dissolved in both buffers are defined under standard conditions.

1995 ◽  
Vol 309 (3) ◽  
pp. 959-962 ◽  
Author(s):  
O Hofmann ◽  
G Carrucan ◽  
N Robson ◽  
T Brittain

The interactions of the three human embryonic haemoglobins with chloride ions have been investigated. Each of the three embryonic haemoglobins exhibits a unique pattern of oxygen-affinity-dependence on chloride ion concentration. Human embryonic haemoglobin Portland (zeta 2 gamma 2) is found to be completely insensitive to chloride ion concentration. Haemoglobin Gower I (zeta 2 gamma 2) shows a small concentration dependence, whilst haemoglobin Gower II (alpha 2 epsilon 2) exhibits a dependence approaching that of the adult protein. The degree of co-operativity for each protein is essentially chloride concentration independent. The chloride-dependent and -independent components of the alkaline Bohr effects have been measured for each of the embryonic haemoglobins and compared with that of the adult protein. Both the chloride-binding data and the Bohr effect have been analysed in terms of the recently developed allosteric model proposed by Perutz [Perutz, Fermi, Poyart, Pagnier and Kister (1993) J. Mol. Biol. 233, 536-545].


Velella velella is a surface living oceanic chondrophore exhibiting the typical blue pigmentation of the neuston. In the present study the properties of the blue astaxanthinproteins of the mantle tissue are reported. The pigments have been separated into four main fractions by gel filtration (V620, V600, V570 and V545) with λmax 620 nm, 600 nm, 570 nm and 545 nm, respectively, and their molecular sizes were estimated. Pigment V620 is a polymeric form, possibly a tetramer, of pigment V600. Analysis of the gradient elution profile of V600 in gel filtration at low chloride ion concentration provides evidence that the pigment is an octamer of V570-size units. Pigment V570 separates in preparative acrylamide electrophoresis into six components. Gel filtration, SDS-electrophoresis and phase-partition experiments show that these are dimers of apoprotein (V545-size) units of molecular mass ca. 2.3 x 10 4 . Estimates of minimum molecular mass based on astaxanthin content reveal that V620 and V600 have two astaxanthin prosthetic groups per apoprotein subunit. The pigments are simple proteins with free sulphydryl groups and negligible tyrosine contents. Pigments V620 and V600 possess specific anion-binding sites which have an influence on the visible and circular dichroism spectra, and on the quaternary structure of the pigments. In the absence of halide ions the pigments dissociate reversibly forming pigments with λmax 583 nm (V600-size) and λmax 565 nm (V570-size). The aniondependence of the spectra of the native pigments and of the components, V583 and V565, separated in halide-free gel filtration, have been investigated. Equations are derived linking the spectral changes and anion-dependent association processes to the anion concentration. The order of effectiveness of anions for the changes (Br - > I - > Cl - > NO - 3 , CNS - ) does not follow the Hofmeister series. The changes take place at low anion concentrations (10 -5 -10 -1 M) with a negative temperature dependence and are partially abolished by blocking lysine residues; higher anion concentrations are required to bring about alterations in the spectra of the separated components V583 and V565. The halide-dependent quaternary structural changes of the pigments have been followed in gel filtration on Bio-Gel columns equilibrated with phosphate buffer containing low concentrations of KGl. In order to explain the high affinity of the pigments for anions and the order of anion effectiveness, it is proposed that the anion-binding sites consist of clusters of basic residues which impose stereospecific restrictions on the anion binding. These sites are progressively lost in the absence of halide ions and following gel filtration of halide-free solutions of the pigments. 36 Chloride-binding measurements, using a gel filtration equilibrium technique, indicate that V600 may have three such sites per apoprotein subunit. The temperature dependence of chloride binding and of the spectral alterations of the pigment show that occupation of the sites causes relatively minor changes in the polypeptide conformations of the native pigment; surface spreading of the pigment revealed only a small increase in the stability of the tertiary and quaternary structure of the pigment in the presence of chloride ions. Pigment V570 and the apoprotein do not possess halide-ion binding sites of high affinity. The astaxanthin prosthetic groups of pigments V620 and V600 are optically active with large molar ellipticity values in the visible region; pigment V570 shows a low molar ellipticity value at the visible absorption maximum. The origin of the optical activity of the carotenoid in the complexes is discussed. Exciton splitting, attributed to carotenoid-carotenoid interaction, is observed in the circular dichroism (c.d.) spectrum of V620 but only in the presence of halide ions. It is suggested that occupation of the anion-binding sites of the pigment affects the relative orientation or distance apart of the chromophores. A comparison of the c.d. spectrum of the pigments in the far ultraviolet did not reveal any major alteration in protein conformation resulting from anion binding. The c.d. spectrum of V600 in the far ultraviolet and the amino acid composition of the pigment are consistent with a high contribution of β-structure to the configuration of the protein. Investigations into the specificity of carotenoid attachment have shown that although astaxanthin combines most efficiently with the apoprotein, other carotenoids, including acetylenic and cyclopentene derivatives, are able to effect quaternary structural changes of the protein. The carotenoid effects dimerization of the apoprotein in the presence of a 4-keto group in one ring and the presence in either ring of an additional hydrophilic substituent; dimerization of the apoprotein is also obtained with the half-carotenoid, 15-15'-dehydro-8'-apo-β-carotene-8'-al-3,4-dione. Both 4- and 4'-keto groups and additional hydrophilic substituents in the carotenoid structure are prerequisites for the further polymerization of the protein. Garotenoproteins showing chloride-dependent spectral shifts are obtained only with carotenoids containing a keto substituent in both rings.


1987 ◽  
Vol 252 (2) ◽  
pp. C153-C162 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Frohlich ◽  
R. B. Gunn

Chloride tracer efflux was measured from intact human erythrocytes into media containing different chloride concentrations and different concentrations of the inhibitors 4,4'-dinitrostilbene-2-2'-disulfonate (DNDS), N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-2-aminoethylsulfonate (NAP-taurine), phloretin, and sulfate. The data were analyzed to test whether these inhibitors were mutually exclusive with each other or whether they could bind at the same time. Under the assumption that mutual exclusiveness is due to steric interference, the data can be used to map out the protein surface near the outward-facing anion binding-transport site. It is concluded that there are separate domains for NAP taurine and phloretin that do not overlap with each other or with the chloride binding site. These two domains do, however, overlap with the binding domain for DNDS that, in addition, excludes the binding of chloride and sulfate.


2010 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 451-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nandana Perera ◽  
Bahram Gharabaghi ◽  
Peter Noehammer ◽  
Bruce Kilgour

Abstract Occurrence of increasing chloride concentrations in urban streams of cold climates, mainly due to road salt application, has raised concerns on its adverse effects on aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Therefore, there is a need for a better understanding of processes associated with road salt application and subsequent discharge into the environment in order to develop management practices to minimize detrimental effects of chlorides. The chloride mass analysis for the Highland Creek watershed based on four years of hourly monitoring data indicates that approximately 60% of the chlorides applied on the watershed enter streams prior to subsequent salting period, 85% of which occurs during the period between November and March. Contribution of private de-icing operations on chloride mass input within Highland Creek watershed was estimated to be approximately 38%, indicating its significance in overall chloride mass balance. Salt application rates, as well as chloride output in the streams, vary spatially based on land use, influencing chloride concentrations in surface waters. The estimated groundwater chloride concentration of 275 mg/L indicates that some aquatic organisms in Highland Creek would potentially be at risk even outside the winter period under dry weather flow conditions.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (11) ◽  
pp. 2186-2193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacques Locat ◽  
Pierre Gélinas

The results of an extensive hydrogeological investigation of the effects of de-icing road salts on Highway 55 near Trois-Rivières-Ouest indicate that a salt lens with chloride concentrations exceeding 800 mg/L exists below the highway. Maximum chloride concentration at the nearby pumping wells, not exceeding 140 mg/L, is reached only in late summer, whereas the maximum chloride infiltration follows the spring snowmelt. About 1 year's worth of road salts is retained in the unsaturated zone. The salt lens, in the upper part of the aquifer beneath the highway, has developed to a thickness of 8 m and a width of 400 m and constitutes a linear source of salts for the aquifer. The shape of this lens is distorted by the action of the pumping wells, and the lens is partly depleted by the end of the summer. Because of the particular characteristics of the aquifer at the site studied and the exploitation methods, no long-term threat to the water quality is foreseen.


1989 ◽  
Vol 258 (2) ◽  
pp. 357-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
D J Chapman ◽  
J De Felice ◽  
K Davis ◽  
J Barber

Incubation of a membrane preparation enriched in Photosystem Two (PSII) at alkaline pH inhibited the water-splitting reactions in two distinct steps. Up to pH 8.5 the inhibition was reversible, whereas at higher alkalinities it was irreversible. It was shown that the reversible phase correlated with loss and rebinding of the 23 kDa extrinsic polypeptide. However, after mild alkaline treatments a partial recovery was possible without the binding of the 23 kDa polypeptide when the assay was at the optimal pH of 6.5 and in a medium containing excess Cl-. The irreversible phase was found to be closely linked with the removal of the 33 kDa extrinsic protein of PSII. Treatments with pH values above 8.5 not only caused the 33 kDa protein to be displaced from the PSII-enriched membranes, but also resulted in an irreversible modification of the binding sites such that the extrinsic 33 kDa protein could not reassociate with PSII when the pH was lowered to 6.5. The results obtained with these more extreme alkaline pH treatments support the notion that the 23 kDa protein cannot bind to PSII unless the 33 kDa protein is already bound. The differential effect of pH on the removal of the 23 kDa and 33 kDa proteins contrasted with the data of Kuwabara & Murata [(1983) Plant Cell Physiol. 24, 741-747], but this discrepancy was accounted for by the use of glycerol in the incubation media.


2011 ◽  
Vol 356-360 ◽  
pp. 1642-1646
Author(s):  
Xue Qiang Zhu ◽  
Bao Ping Han ◽  
Guo Jun Wu ◽  
Xiao Qing Zhang

The effects of individual inorganic anions (nitrate and chloride) on the reactivity of granular iron were investigated using plexiglass columns packed with granular iron. The results show that TCE removal decreases apparently with increasing nitrate concentration due to competition for reactive sites. Chloride exhibits dual-effect on the TCE removal by Fe0. In the studied condition, the TCE dechlorination is enhanced at the low chloride concentration due to pitting corrosion and is dampened at the high chloride concentrations such as 59.98 and 110.45 mg/L as Cl-.


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