Publication | Closed Access
Hexamers of subunit II from <i>Limulus</i> hemocyanin (a 48‐mer) have the same quaternary structure as whole <i>Panulirus</i> hemocyanin molecules
17
Citations
23
References
1991
Year
Hemocyanins are copper-containing proteins that transport oxygen in a variety of invertebrates. Considerable evidence has accumulated that arthropodan hemocyanins are multimers of a fundamental hexameric unit. X-Ray crystallographic structure determination has revealed that the hemocyanin molecule from the spiny lobster Panulirus interruptus is a single hexamer having 32 point group symmetry. Using crystals of subunit II, one of 8 polypeptide types comprising the octahexameric hemocyanin of the horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus, and the molecular replacement method for crystallographic phase determination we show that subunit II forms assemblies with the same hexameric quaternary structure as the whole Panulirus hemocyanin molecule. Observation of the same hexameric motif in two widely separated species provides strong additional evidence that this quaternary structural unit is a universal building block of arthropodan hemocyanins.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1