Myoglobin (oxy-myoglobin at 1.0 Angstrom resolution:
PDB 1A6M (
http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/cgi/explore.cgi?pid=105291034356398&page=0&pdbId=1A6M). Sperm whale myoglobin at 1.7 Angstrom resolution:
PDB 1VXH (
http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/cgi/explore.cgi?pid=255731034609024&page=80&pdbId=1VXH)) is a single-chain
protein of 153 amino acids, containing an iron porphyrin group in the center and being the primary
oxygen-carrying pigment of muscle tissues. Unlike
hemoglobin, to which it is structurally related, this protein does not exhibit
cooperative binding of oxygen. Instead, the binding of oxygen by myoglobin is unaffected by the oxygen tension in the surrounding tissue. In
1957,
John Kendrew[?] and associates successfully determined the structure of myoglobin by high-resolution X-ray crystallography.
For this, in 1962, John Kendrew shared the Nobel Prize in chemistry with Max Perutz.
See also hemoglobin, hemoprotein
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