Resonance Raman spectra of oxygenated and deoxygenated functional erythrocytes recorded using 785 nm laser excitation are presented. The high-quality spectra show a mixture of enhanced A(1g), A(2g), B(1g), B(2g), E(u) and vinyl modes. The high sensitivity of the Raman system enabled spectra from four oxygenation and deoxygenation cycles to be recorded with only 18 mW of power at the sample over a 60-minute period. This low power prevented photo-/thermal degradation and negated protein denaturation leading to heme aggregation. The large database consisting of 210 spectra from the four cycles was analyzed with principal components analysis (PCA). The PC1 loadings plot provided exquisite detail on bands associated with the oxygenated and deoxygenated states. The enhancement of a band at 567 cm(-1), observed in the spectra of oxygenated cells and the corresponding PC1 loadings plot, was assigned to the Fe-O(2) stretching mode, while a band appearing at 419 cm(-1) was assigned to the Fe-O-O bending mode based on previous studies. For deoxygenated cells, the enhancement of B(1g) modes at 785 nm excitation is consistent with vibronic coupling between band III and the Soret transition. In the case of oxygenated cells, the enhancement of iron-axial out-of-plane modes and non-totally symmetric modes is consistent with enhancement into the y,z-polarized transition a(iu)(pi)-->d(xz)+O(2)(pi(g)) centered at 785 nm. The enhancement of non-totally symmetric B(1g) modes in oxygenated cells suggests vibronic coupling between band IV and the Soret band. This study provides new insights into the vibrational dynamics, electronic structure and resonant enhancement of heme moieties within functional erythrocytes at near-IR excitation wavelengths.
We present the first recorded Raman spectra of haemoglobin in both the R and T states from within a single living erythrocyte using 632.8 nm excitation. Bands characteristic of low spin haems are observed in oxygenated and carboxylated erythrocytes at approx. 1636 (nu(10)), 1562-1565 (nu(2)), 1250-1245 cm(-1) (nu(13)) and 1226-1224 cm(-1) (nu(5)+nu(8)). The spectra of deoxygenated and methaemoglobin erythrocytes have characteristic high spin bands at approx. 1610-1606 cm(-1) (nu(10)), 1582-1580 (nu(37)), 1547-1544 (nu(11)), 1230-1220 cm(-1) (nu(13)) and 1215-1210 cm(-1) (nu(5)+nu(8)). Bands at 1172 (nu(30)), 976 (nu(45)) and 672 (nu(7)) cm(-1) appear to be enhanced at 632.8 nm in low spin haems. The oxidation state marker band (nu(4)) at 1364-1366 cm(-1) appeared invariant within this domain in all single cells and conditions investigated contrary to other resonance Raman studies on haem isolates. The information gained by in vivo single erythrocyte molecular analysis has important ramifications to the understanding of fundamental physiological processes and may have applications in the diagnosis and treatment of red blood cell disorders.
Several blood-feeding organisms, including the malaria parasite detoxify haem released from host haemoglobin by conversion to the insoluble crystalline ferriprotoporphyrin IX dimer known as haemozoin. To date the mechanism of haemozoin formation has remained unknown, although lipids or proteins have been suggested to catalyse its formation. We have found that beta-haematin (synthetic haemozoin) forms rapidly under physiologically realistic conditions near octanol/water, pentanol/water and lipid/water interfaces. Molecular dynamics simulations show that a precursor of the haemozoin dimer forms spontaneously in the absence of the competing hydrogen bonds of water, demonstrating that this substance probably self-assembles near a lipid/water interface in vivo.
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