The general term protoporphyrin refers to porphine derivatives that have the outer
hydrogen atoms in the four
pyrrole rings replaced by other functional groups. The prefix proto often means 'first' in science nomenclature (such as
carbon protoxide), hence
Hans Fischer is thought to have coined the name protoporphyrin as the first class of porphyrins. Fischer described iron-deprived heme becoming the "proto-" porphyrin, particularly in reference to Hugo Kammerer's porphyrin. In modern times, 'proto-' specifies a porphyrin species bearing methyl, vinyl, and carboxyethyl/propionate side groups.
Fischer also generated the
Roman numeral naming system which includes 15 protoporphyrin analogs, the naming system is not systematic however. An alternative name for heme is iron protoporphyrin IX (iron PPIX). PPIX contains four
methyl groups (M), two
vinyl groups (V), and two
propionic acid groups (P). The suffix "IX" indicates that these chains occur in the circular order MV-MV-MP-PM around the outer cycle at the following respective positions: c2,c3-c7,c8-c12,c13-c17,c18. The use of Greek letters in this context originates from the pioneering work of
Georg Barkan in 1932. ==Properties==