myoglobin
- Key People:
- Sir John Cowdery Kendrew
- Related Topics:
- oxymyoglobin
- deoxymyoglobin
- metmyoglobin
- glycoprotein
myoglobin, a protein found in the muscle cells of animals. It functions as an oxygen-storage unit, providing oxygen to the working muscles. It is found predominantly in striated muscle tissue, namely skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle. mammalssealswhales
There is a close chemical similarity between myoglobin and hemoglobin, the oxygen-binding protein of red blood cells. Both proteins contain a molecular constituent called heme, which enables them to combine reversibly with oxygen. The heme group, which contains iron, imparts a red-brown color to the proteins. The bond between oxygen and hemoglobin is more complex than that between oxygen and myoglobin and accounts for the dual ability hemoglobin has to both transport and store oxygen.
In contact with venous blood, oxygen combines more readily with myoglobin than it does with hemoglobin, favoring the transfer of oxygen from blood to muscle cells. Thus, the oxygen that the working muscle requires for the energy-producing biochemical reactions is provided. The significance of myoglobin is evident in diving mammals, such as seals and whales; such mammals are able to remain submerged for long periods because they have greater amounts of myoglobin in their muscles compared to other animals.
Myoglobin has been obtained in pure crystalline form from many sources. It has a molecular weight of 16,700, about one-fourth that of hemoglobin. Though the heme portion of all myoglobins is the same, the protein portions vary considerably between species.
Myoglobin has been of great importance in the elucidation of protein structure. In 1962 a share of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry was awarded to John C. Kendrew for work, utilizing the technique of X-ray diffraction, that permitted construction of a three-dimensional model of crystalline sperm-whale myoglobin.