Takahashi et al. (1985) determined that human plasma hemopexin consists of a single polypeptide chain of 439 amino acids residues with six intrachain
disulfide bridges and has a molecular mass of approximately 63 kD. The
amino-terminal threonine residue is modified by a mucin-type O-linked
galactosamine oligosaccharide, and the protein has five N-linked glycan modifications. The 18 tryptophan residues are arranged in four clusters, and 12 of the tryptophans are conserved in
homologous positions. Computer-assisted analysis of the internal homology in amino acid sequence suggested duplication of an ancestral gene thus indicating that hemopexin consists of two similar halves. Altruda et al. (1988) demonstrated that the HPX gene spans approximately 12 kb and is interrupted by 9 exons. The demonstration shows direct correspondence between
exons and the 10 repeating units in the protein. The introns were not placed randomly; they fell in the center of the region of amino acid sequence homology in strikingly similar locations in 6 of the 10 units and in a symmetric position in each half of the coding sequence. From these observations, Altruda et al. (1988) concluded that the gene evolved through intron-mediated duplications of a primordial sequence to a 5-exon cluster. == Mapping of hemopexin gene ==