3b (more exchange/transport) Flashcards
what is haemoglobin?
a large protein with a quaternary structure (4 polypeptide chains)
each chain has a haem group which contains an iron ion
what does affinity for oxygen mean?
how many oxygens can bind to haemoglobin?
tendency to combine with oxygen
4
what is the reversable reaction for oxygen association and dissociation?
haemoglobin + oxygen <-> oxyhaemoglobin
(Hb+ 4O2<-> HbO8)
what is partial pressure of oxygen/ CO2
(pO2) (pCO2)
measure of oxygen/ carbon dioxide concentration. greater conc of dissolved O2/ CO2 the higher the partial pressure
what does affinity for oxygen depend on?
the partial pressure of oxygen
oxygen loads onto haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin where theres a high pO2
oxyhaemoglobin unloads its oxygen where theres a lower pO2
think of a question for this
O2 enters blood cappilaries at alveoli which have a high pO2 so O2 loads onto haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin
when cells respire, they use up O2 which lowers the pO2. rbc deliver oxyhaemoglobin into respiring tissues where it unloads oxygen
haemoglobin then returns to lungs to pick up more O2
what is is an oxygen dissociation curve?
shows how affinity for oxygen varies and how saturated haemoglobin is with oxygen at any partial pressure
describe oxygen dissociation curve
see poster on it
1)tertiary structure quite tight so difficult for o2 to physically get in- hard for 1st o2 to associate- low affinity so gradient flat
2)1st o2 binding changes shape of quaternary structure so easier for other sub units to bind to o2 to gradient steeper
3)smaller increase in partial pressure needed for 2nd o2 to bind- positive cooperativity so gradient steepens
4)in theory, easy for 4th to bind but hard in practice as majorit of binding sites are occupied so less likely for o2 to find empty site- conc grad decreases
what is the bohr effect?
haemoglobin gives up oxygen more readily at a higher pCO2
cells respire and produce CO2 so raise pCO2
increases rate of oxygen unloading so dissociation curve shifts right
saturation of blood with oxygen is lower for a given pO2 so more oxygen released
check book
how does haemoglobin and dissociation curve change for different organisms
diff organism= diff type of haemoglobin= diff O2 transporting abilities
environment w low O2 conc- haemoglobin w higher affinity for O2 than humans so curve shifts left (lugworm left)
very active so have high O2 demand- haemoglobin w lower affinity for O2 than humans so curve shifts right
what are the names of all the blood vessels entering and leaving the heart lungs and kidneys?
see page 74 of revision guide
what does blood transport?
respiratory gases, products of digestion, metabolic waste and hormones
why is the heart called a double circulatory system? what is the hearts blood supply called?
there are 2 circuits
one takes blood from the heart to the lungs and back to the heart and the other takes blood around the rest of the body
the left and right coronary arteries
what are arteries?
blood vessels that carry blood away from the heart
thick muscular walls
elastic tissue to stretch and recoil to maintain pressure
endothelium (inner lining) is folded so artery can stretch maintaining high bp
all carry oxygenated blood apart from pulmonary artery
what are arterioles?
arteries divide into smaller blood vessels which form a network
blood directed to diff areas of demand by muscles inside arterioles which contract to restrict the blood flow or relax to allow blood flow
what are veins?
adaptations?
what do they carry?
blood vessels which carry blood to heart
wider lumen than arteries with very little elastic or muscle tissue
contain valves to prevent backflow
flow through veins helped by contraction of body muscles surrounding them
all carry deoxygenated blood except for pulmonary veins
what are capillaries?
how are they adapted?
smallest blood vessel which arterioles branch into
substances exchanged between cells and capillaries so theyre adapted for efficient diffusion
-found very near cells in exchange tissues so short diffusion pathway
- walls one cell thick so short diffusion pathway
- lots of capillaries (form capillary bed) so large surface area
what is tissue fluid?
what is it made from?
what is its role?
fluid that surrounds cells in tissues
made from small molecules that leave the blood plasma like water, oxygen, nutrients but not rbc or big proteins as they are too big to be pushed out of capillary walls
cells take in oxygen and nutrients from tissue fluid and release metabolic waste into it
how is tissue fluid formed?
in capillary bed, substances move out of capillaries into tissue fluid by pressure filtration
1. at start of capillary bed, nearest arteries, hydrostatic pressure in cap is greater than tissue fluid
2. difference means overall outward pressure forces fluid out of capillaries and into spaces around cells forming tissue fluid
3. as fluid leaves, hydrostatic pressure reduces in capillaries so is lower at venule end
4. due to fluid loss and increasing conc of plasma proteins (which dont leave caps), the water pot at the venule end is lower than tissue fluid
5. so some water re-enters caps from tissue fluid at venule end by osmosis
what happens to excess tissue fluid?
drained into lymphatic system which transports it from tissues and puts it back in circulatory system
what can cause an accumulation of tissue fluid in the tissues?
high blood pressure as it creates a high hydrostatic pressure in the capillaries
label a diagram of the heart
what does the right side pump?
what does the left side pump?
see poster
right- deoxygenated blood to lungs
left- oxygenated blood to whole body