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Globin family grows: blood-protein relative is in all tissues.


The blood protein hemoglobin and its relative, myoglobin myoglobin (mī'əglō`bĭn), protein molecule isolated from the cells of vertebrate skeletal muscle that is both a structural and functional relative of hemoglobin, the oxygen-transport protein of the blood of higher animals. , carry and store life-giving oxygen in many animals. Researchers long thought these complex proteins, with their unique fold, were the only two globins in vertebrates. Other globins had been discovered in invertebrates, plants, bacteria, and fungi.

Two years ago, however, a third vertebrate globin globin /glo·bin/ (glo´bin)
1. the protein constituent of hemoglobin.

2. any of a group of proteins similar to the typical globin.


glo·bin
n.
 was discovered in the human brain and named neuroglobin. Now, scientists have chanced across a fourth globin, and they say it's present in all body cells.

Because of their high concentrations in blood and muscle, hemoglobin and myoglobin are among the best-studied proteins.

Hemoglobin-packed blood cells blood cells,
n.pl the formed elements of the blood, including red cells (erythrocytes), white cells (leukocytes), and platelets (thrombocytes).


blood cells

See erythrocyte and leukocyte. Platelets are classed separately.
 act as a molecular supply caravan, taking up oxygen in the lungs and then dropping it off in other tissues. The protein is responsible for blood's ruby-red color. Myoglobin molecules reside in muscle cells, where they store oxygen for use during rigorous muscular activity.

Biologists have yet to determine the function of neuroglobin, which was discovered by Thorsten Burmester's team at Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany.

Even as that mystery lingers, Burmester's team describes its discovery of the globin it calls cytoglobin in the April Molecular Biology molecular biology, scientific study of the molecular basis of life processes, including cellular respiration, excretion, and reproduction. The term molecular biology was coined in 1938 by Warren Weaver, then director of the natural sciences program at the Rockefeller  and Evolution. At Iowa State University Academics
ISU is best known for its degree programs in science, engineering, and agriculture. ISU is also home of the world's first electronic digital computing device, the Atanasoff–Berry Computer.
 at Ames, another group independently announces the same discovery in an upcoming Journal of Biological Chemistry The Journal of Biological Chemistry (often abbreviated JBC) is a scientific journal founded in 1905 and published since 1925 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. , although this team calls the molecule histoglobin.

The authors of both papers discovered the gene for the new globin by using computers to search public databases of human DNA sequences created during the human genome project. Using the technique known as gene mining, the researchers instructed computers to find DNA sequences similar to those in the genes for other globins.

The function of the new globin remains unknown, but Burmester suggests it could have a role in oxygen transport and storage similar to myoglobin's.

Both research teams also propose that the newly discovered globin may act as an enzyme that mops up dangerous free radical molecules, such as nitric oxide nitric oxide or nitrogen monoxide, a colorless gas formed by the combustion of nitrogen and oxygen as given by the reaction: energy + N2 + O2 → 2NO; m.p. −163.6°C;; b.p. −151.8°C;. , that are produced during normal chemical reactions. Nitric oxide is a signaling agent within the body, but it can wreak havoc if it's not kept under control, says Mark S. Hargrove, a coauthor of the Iowa State study. "Bacteria have globins specifically for this purpose" and not for oxygen transport, he adds.

"If I was a betting man, I'd put my money on them both [neuroglobin and cytoglobin/histoglobin] being nitric oxide scavengers," comments Robert Hill, who studies plant globins at the University of Manitoba Location
The main Fort Garry campus is a complex on the Red River in south Winnipeg. It has an area of 2.74 square kilometres. More than 60 major buildings support the teaching and research programs of the university.
 in Winnipeg. Hill says he's about to publish data suggesting that both these vertebrate globins share structural properties with several plant globins that are nitric oxide scavengers.

"Mining [the human-genome database] for genes requires a little bit of tricky programming," says William Royer Jr., a biochemist at the University of Massachusetts The system includes UMass Amherst, UMass Boston, UMass Dartmouth (affiliated with Cape Cod Community College), UMass Lowell, and the UMass Medical School. It also has an online school called UMassOnline.  in Worcester. However, "it's becoming an increasingly common technique." Royer says he believes that the same method could yield discoveries of further vertebrate globins.
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Title Annotation:cytoglobin's function still unknown
Author:Pickrell, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Apr 13, 2002
Words:478
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