7.1: Haemoglobin Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the protein structure of a Haemoglobin molecule

A

Primary structure - sequence of amino acids in the 4 polypeptide chains

Secondary structure - Each polypeptide chain is coiled into a helix

Tertiary structure - Each polypeptide chain is folded into a precise shape - important for oxygen carrying

Quaternary structure - All 4 polypeptides are linked together in an almost spherical molecule. Each polypeptide is associated with a haem (fe2+) molecule which can combine with a single o2 molecule

Each haemoglobin molecule can carry 4 Oxygen molecules

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2
Q

What is the loading of oxygen and where does this occur

A

The process by which Haemoglobin binds with oxygen

Also known as Associating. This takes place in the lungs

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3
Q

What is the un-loading of oxygen and where does this occur

A

The process by which Haemoglobin releases its oxygen

Also known as dissociating. This takes place at respiring tissues

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4
Q

What does a high affinity for oxygen mean

A

That haemoglobin will more readily bind with oxygen, however will less readily release it

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5
Q

What does a low affinity for oxygen mean

A

That haemoglobin will less readily bind with oxygen, however will more readily release it

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6
Q

What is the role of haemoglobin

A
  1. To readily associate with oxygen at the surface where gas exchange takes place
  2. Readily dissociate from oxygen at those tissues requiring it
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7
Q

What is the property of haemoglobin that makes it achieve its role

A

It is able to change its affinity for oxygen under different conditions

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8
Q

How does haemoglobin change its affinity

A

When in the presence of CO2, it changes shape. The changed shape binds more loosely to oxygen, as a result haemoglobin releases its oxygen to the tissues surrounding it

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9
Q

Where is CO2 concentration highest

A

Next to respiring tissues, where oxygen is needed. Therefore oxygen dissociates

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10
Q

Where is CO2 concentration lowest

A

On the surface of gas exchange, lungs, where Oxygen takes up the majority. Oxygen therefore associates

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11
Q

Why re there different haemoglobins

A

Each species produces haemoglobin with a slightly different amino acid sequence. Therefore it has a different tertiary/quarternary structure and hence different oxygen binding properties.

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