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Impact of hemoglobin biophysical studies on molecular pathogenesis and drug therapy for sickle cell disease

William A. Eaton

2021Molecular Aspects of Medicine21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Basic research on hemoglobin has been essential for understanding the origin and treatment of many hematological disorders due to abnormal hemoglobins. The most important of the hemoglobinopathies is sickle cell disease - Linus Pauling's "molecular disease" that gave birth to molecular medicine. In this review, I will describe the contributions of basic biophysical research on normal and sickle cell hemoglobin (HbS) to understanding the molecular pathogenesis of the disease and providing the conceptual basis for the various approaches to drug therapy that target HbS polymerization. Most prominent among these are the experimental results on the solubility of HbS as a function of oxygen saturation explained by the allosteric model of Monod, Wyman, and Changeux and the Gill-Wyman thermodynamic linkage relation between solubility and oxygen binding, the solubility of mixtures of HbS with normal or fetal hemoglobin explained by Minton's thermodynamic model, and the highly unusual kinetics of HbS polymerization explained by a novel double nucleation mechanism that also accounts for the aggregation kinetics of the Alzheimer's peptide. The HbS polymerization kinetics are of great importance to understanding the pathophysiology and clinical course, as well as guiding drug development for treating this common and severe disease. The article focuses primarily on experimental and theoretical results from my lab, so it is not a comprehensive review of the subject.

Topics & Concepts

HemoglobinFetal hemoglobinDiseaseChemistryKineticsHemoglobin sSolubilityMedicineSickle cell anemiaBiochemistryInternal medicineFetusBiologyOrganic chemistryGeneticsPregnancyPhysicsQuantum mechanicsHemoglobinopathies and Related DisordersHemoglobin structure and functionErythrocyte Function and Pathophysiology