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Purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic study of haemoglobin from camel ( Camelus dromedarius ): a high oxygen‐affinity lowland species
Author(s) -
Balasubramanian M.,
Sathya Moorthy Pon.,
Neelagandan K.,
Ponnuswamy M. N.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section f
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1744-3091
DOI - 10.1107/s1744309109024154
Subject(s) - crystallization , crystallography , chemistry , biology , organic chemistry
Haemoglobin is a prototypical allosteric protein that is mainly involved in the transportation of oxygen from the lungs to tissues and of carbon dioxide back to the lungs in an intrinsically coordinated manner to maintain the viability of cells. Haemoglobin from Camelus dromedarius provides an interesting case study of adaptation to life in deserts at extremely high temperatures. An ambition to unravel the integrated structural and functional aspects of the casual survival of this animal at high temperatures led us to specifically work on this problem. The present work reports the preliminary crystallographic study of camel haemoglobin. Camel blood was collected and the haemoglobin was purified by anion‐exchange chromatography and crystallized using the hanging‐drop vapour‐diffusion method under buffered high salt concentration using PEG 3350 as a precipitant. Intensity data were collected using a MAR 345 dtb image‐plate detector system. Camel haemoglobin crystallized in the monoclinic space group P 2 1 , with one whole biological molecule (α 2 β 2 ) in the asymmetric unit and unit‐cell parameters a = 52.759, b  = 116.782, c = 52.807 Å, β = 120.07°.

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