Nature
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Haem is degraded to bile pigments in the catabolism of haemoproteins in mammals and in the formation of photosynthetic pigments in algae. The first stage of this reaction involves oxygen attack at one of the four methene-bridge carbon atoms, which is ultimately eliminated as CO(ref. 1). The four bridges are not sterically equivalent (Fig. 1) and the bilirubin in mammalian bile and algal bile pigments consists almost exclusively of the alpha-isomers. ⋯ The degradation process has been simulated in vitro by a 'coupled oxidation' method in which the proportions of the four possible isomeric products depend on the nature of the globin moiety to which the haem is bound. We report here the use of an interactive computer display system to explore the relative accessibilities of the four methene bridges to a haem-bound oxygen molecule in myoglobin and in the alpha and beta chains of haemoglobin. Our calculated interaction energies agree well with the proportions of the four isomers that are observed experimentally.
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The kinetics of the thrombin-catalysed release of fibrino-peptides A and B from human fibrinogen have been investigated and a mechanism correlating the release of fibrinopeptides to fibrin formation is presented. The sequential release of fibrinopeptides results in sequential activation of two sets of polymerisation sites.
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General relativity theory could be tested on a cosmological scale by measuring the Hubble constant and the deceleration parameter, if, in addition, everything could be known about the matter filling the universe. If, on the other hand, nothing could be presupposed about the matter content of the universe, general relativity could not be tested by measuring any number of time derivatives of the scale factor. But upon making the assumption of a universe filled with a non-interacting mixture of non-relativistic matter and radiation we can in principle test general relativity by measuring the first five derivatives of the scale factor. In the following, some general relations are presented using this assumption.