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Topic: Origins of Hemoglobin Absorption in UV/Vis  (Read 3616 times)

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Offline CopperSmurf

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Origins of Hemoglobin Absorption in UV/Vis
« on: March 18, 2014, 11:23:00 PM »
I was asked about this several times by different people and have only a partial answer.  What is the origin of all the absorption bands between 400 nm and 600 nm ? I believe the absorption at around 400 is due to the Soret band that comes from the heme, but how about the weaker bands at 500 nm and 600 nm ? Do those originate from the heme as well? From a charge transfer? Energizing the pi orbitals? Am curious to know! Hopefully someone with a better physical chemistry background than me has the answer.

Offline Babcock_Hall

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Re: Origins of Hemoglobin Absorption in UV/Vis
« Reply #1 on: March 19, 2014, 09:26:51 AM »
Cytochrome c, which has a covalently bound heme group, has absorptions between 500 and 600 nm that depend upon the oxidation state.

Offline Corribus

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Re: Origins of Hemoglobin Absorption in UV/Vis
« Reply #2 on: March 19, 2014, 10:05:11 AM »
Porphyrins, which include heme, have a strong, fully allowed B-band transition (aka Soret band) around 400 nm and a series of partially forbidden Q-band transition usually in the 500-600 nm region. Both of these transitions are electronic, singlet-to-singlet, and nominally π-π* in origin, at least in most common porphyrin derivatives. The Q-bands are partially forbidden due to configuration interaction and subtractive effects that occur when taking linear combinations of the transition dipole moment integrals.  Weak S0 :rarrow: S1 transitions are fairly common in conjugated molecules with significant symmetry for this reason. Both the B-bands and Q-bands are split into x- and y-polarized counterparts, but in most porphyrins these transitions are degenerate or nearly so due to the high degree of symmetry of the chromophore. Also, the Q-band transition region usually features significant vibronic structure, which is not very well resolved in the B-band region.

As Babcock_Hall mentioned, the peak maxima (and intensity) of the Q-band transitions especially are sensitive to functionalization of the porphyrin macrocycle as well as the oxidation state, identity and ligand structure of the bound metal center. This is because such structural changes subtly attenuate the HOMO and LUMO orbital energies of the conjugated macrocycle π-system. Hence the shift of colors of hemoglobin when oxygen is bound/unbound, and the shift in color of chlorophyll with subtle functional group changes that afford good coverage of a large part of the solar spectrum (e.g., Chlorophyll a and b). (Technically chlorophyll is a chlorin not a porphyrin, but the same principle holds.)
What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were like a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent?  - Richard P. Feynman

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