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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Complete amino acid sequence of myoglobin from the pilot whale, Globicephala melaena.

The complete amino acid sequence of the major component myoglobin from the pilot whale, Globicephala melaena, was determined by specific cleavage of the protein to obtain large peptides which are readily degraded by the automatic sequencer. The apomyoglobin was selectively cleaved at the two methionyl residues with cyanogen bromide and the acetimidated apomyoglobin was cleaved at the three arginyl residues by trypsin. From the sequence analysis of four of these peptides and the apoprotein, over 90% of the covalent structure of the protein was obtained. The remainder of the primary structure was determined by sequence analysis of three of the tryptic peptides isolated from the central cyanogen bromide fragment after modification of its single arginyl residue with 1,2-cyclohexanedione. This myoglobin differs from that of the Black Sea dolphin at four positions and from the myoglobin of the killer whale, Pacific common dolphin, and Atlantic bottlenosed dolphin at two positions. The above differences reflect the close taxonomic relationship of these five species of Cetacea. This sequence determination was aided by the use of a Texas Instruments 980A minicomputer system which performed peak integrations for all samples subjected to amino acid analysis.[1]

References

  1. Complete amino acid sequence of myoglobin from the pilot whale, Globicephala melaena. Jones, B.N., Dwulet, F.E., Lehman, L.D., Garner, M.H., Bogardt, R.A., Garner, W.H., Gurd, F.R. Biochemistry (1978) [Pubmed]
 
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