Arthropod hemocyanins are large oligomeric oxygen-transporting protein
s with molecular weight ranging from 450 kDa in the spiny lobster (Pan
ulirus interruptus) up to more than 3.6 mDa in the horseshoe crab (Lim
ulus polyphemus). Hemocyanins from different species consist of one or
multiple copies of a hexameric building block (of 450 kDa) and are su
fficiently large to be easily visualized in the electron microscope. A
rthropod hemocyanins were among the first macromolecules studied by mu
ltivariate statistical image analysis techniques. We present an overvi
ew of the different characteristic molecular images of various multihe
xameric (1 x 6, 2 x 6, 4 x 6, and 8 x 6) assemblies as these occur in
electron-microscopical preparations. We also model the different assem
blies in three dimensions by merging multiple copies of the X-ray-diff
raction electron density of the single hexameric hemocyanin of Panulir
us interruptus. By making correct enantiomeric decisions while merging
the densities at the various levels of assembly and by fine-tuning th
e assembly parameters used, a good match can be obtained between the m
icroscopical images and two-dimensional projections calculated from th
e three-dimensional (3D) model densities. Knowledge of the quaternary
structures of this intricate hierarchical family of oligomers is essen
tial for understanding the allosteric interactions associated with the
ir strong oxygen-binding cooperativity.