hemes
Heme is an iron-containing porphyrin prosthetic group that occurs in many proteins across living organisms. The core is a protoporphyrin IX macrocycle coordinated to a single iron ion, usually in the ferrous (Fe2+) or ferric (Fe3+) state. In most proteins the iron is bound by four nitrogen atoms of the porphyrin and by two axial ligands provided by the surrounding protein, often including a histidine and a molecule such as oxygen, carbon monoxide, or NO.
Heme plays essential roles in oxygen transport, storage, electron transfer, and catalysis. In hemoglobin and myoglobin,
Biosynthesis and degradation: Heme is synthesized through a multistep pathway in which ferrochelatase inserts iron into
Types and variants: Heme b is the most common form in vertebrate hemoproteins; heme a is a
Clinical relevance: defects in heme biosynthesis underlie porphyrias; altered heme availability affects metabolism, signaling, and drug