Red Blood with Blue-Blood Ancestry: Intriguing Structure of a Snail Hemoglobin

The phylogenetic enigma of snail hemoglobin, its isolated occurrence in a single gastropod family, the Planorbidae, and the lack of sequence data, stimulated the present study. We present here the complete cDNA and predicted amino acid sequence of two hemoglobin polypeptides from the planorbid Biomp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2006-08, Vol.103 (32), p.12011-12016
Hauptverfasser: Lieb, Bernhard, Dimitrova, Konstantina, Kang, Hio-Sun, Braun, Sabrina, Gebauer, Wolfgang, Martin, Andreas, Hanelt, Ben, Saenz, Steven A., Adema, Coen M., Markl, Jürgen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The phylogenetic enigma of snail hemoglobin, its isolated occurrence in a single gastropod family, the Planorbidae, and the lack of sequence data, stimulated the present study. We present here the complete cDNA and predicted amino acid sequence of two hemoglobin polypeptides from the planorbid Biomphalaria glabrata (intermediate host snail for the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni). Both isoforms contain 13 different, cysteine-free globin domains, plus a small N-terminal nonglobin "plug" domain with three cysteines for subunit dimerization (total $M_r$ ≈ 238 kDa). We also identified the native hemoglobin molecule and present here a preliminary 3D reconstruction from electron microscopical images (3 nm resolution); it suggests a 3 x 2-mer quaternary structure (Mr ≈ 1.43 MDa). Moreover, we identified a previously undescribed rosette-like hemolymph protein that has been mistaken for hemoglobin. We also detected expression of an incomplete hemocyanin as trace component. The combined data show that B. glabrata hemoglobin evolved from pulmonate myoglobin, possibly to replace a less-efficient hemocyanin, and reveals a surprisingly simple evolutionary mechanism to create a high molecular mass respiratory protein from 78 similar globin domains.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0601861103