chlorocruorin

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Etymology

From chloro- +‎ cruor +‎ -in (see also cruorin). Named by British zoologist Ray Lankester in 1868.

Noun

chlorocruorin (uncountable)

  1. (biochemistry, organic chemistry) A green respiratory pigment found in many annelids.
    • 1966, David Keilin, Joan Keilin (editor), The History of Cell Respiration and Cytochrome, University of Cambridge, page 174,
      Later it was shown that the α-bands of the pyridine haemochromogens of both cytochrome a and chlorocruorin resemble each other closely (Keilin, 1933 a).
    • 2003, Ashok Kumar, Animal Physiology, Discovery Publishing House, page 192,
      The affinity of chlorocruorin for oxygen is equivalent to the haemoglobin. It is interesting that within the same family of worms like [S]abellidae, [S]erpulidae and [A]mphotritidae same[sic] species have chlorocruorin while others have haemoglobin.
    • 1992, N. B. Terwilliger, Chapter 8: Molecular Structure of the Extracellular Heme Proteins, Ch. P. Mangum (editor), Advances in Comparative & Environmental Physiology 13: Blood and Tissue Oxygen Carriers, Springer-Verlag, 1992 softcover reprint, page 203,
      It was earlier thought that chlorocruorin was very different from hemoglobin based on a subunit structure with a mass of 34-35 kDa (Antonini et al. 1962; Guerratore and Zito 1977). [] Some writers have questioned the value of drawing a distinction between the chlorocruorins and hemoglobins, especially from an evolutionary point of view (Mangum 1985; see also Toulson, Chap. 9, this Vol.). The visual phenomenon of green blood has perhaps led to a stronger distinction between chlorocruorin and hemoglobin than warranted.

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