Carriage of Oxygen in blood Flashcards
Important concepts-oxygen
- Vast majority of oxygen in blood carried on haemoglobin (Hb: 98% of total oxygen)
- Need carrier molecule (oxygen poorly soluble in water and blood is mostly water)
- Hb can carry up to 4 oxygen molecules
- Haemglobin saturation: percentage of total Hb binding sites available for oxygen binding that are occupied by oxygen
- If alveolar oxygen is increased (i.e. person given supplemental oxygen) once all Hb molecules fully saturated (100% saturation) - only dissolved oxygen levelsl can increase
- There is small amount oxygen dissolved in plasma (1-2% of total oxygen)- part of blood with no cells
- Amount oxygen arterial blood determined by amount oxygen in lung alveoli
Important concepts-carbon dioxide
- Contrasted with oxygen, carbon dioxide (CO2) is soluble in water- so soluble in blood plasma
- CO2 in blood exists in 3 forms:
a. Dissolved CO2: 10%
b. CO2 reacted with water to form bicarbonate (HCO3-): 60%
c. CO2 bound to haemoglobin (at different site from oxygen): 30% - Amount dissolved CO2 arterial blood plasma determined by amount CO2 in lung alveoli-equilibrium
- The majority of CO2 in blood is not transported by a carrier. This means that the more CO2 produced by tissues the more can be delivered to lungs to be exhaled
- CO2 is not just a waste product but is also used in the buffer system
What is the function of the cardiovascular system?
- Supply oxygen and metabolic fuel (e.g glucose) to tissues and remove product of metabolism (e.g CO2)
- Maintain defenses against invading micro-organisms
- Deliver hormones&nutrients
- Carriage of oxygen (O2) is problem because oxygen is powerful oxidising agent
- Most organic molecules are damaged by too high concentration of O2
- Erythrocytes are specially designed to carry this dangerous cargo
What is oxdiation?
Oxidation = loss electrons
Oxidising agents combine with other atoms or molecules and remove electrons leaving oxidised molecule
This process releases energy
What is reduction?
Reduction=gain electrons
Reducing agents protect against electron loss by donating electrons back
This process requires energy
Describe the haemoglobin
- Oxygen carrier must be able to bind to oxygen reversibly
- Haemoglobin is unique molecule-can combine rapidly and reversibly with oxygen without becoming permanently oxidised
- RBCs biconcave disks-diameter: 7um, thickness: 2um, volume of 90femtolitres
- RBC contains 270 million molecules, weighing 30 picograms (mean corpuscular haemoglobin or MCH)
- Sizes RBCs can vary in several common illness: smaller-microcytic anaemia, larger-macrocytic anaemia
Haemoglobin equation
Low level haemoglobin: anaemia
High level of haemoglobin: polycythaemia
MCHC=MCH/volume
= mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration/volume of RBC
Haemoglobin concentration=measure amount of haemoglobin per litre x whole blood
Haematocrit-the blood test
- Ratio of the volume of RBCs to the total volume of blood- can be presented as ratio or percent
- The normal ranges depend on age and beginning in adolescence, sex of person
- Normal range for adults:
Adult cis-males: 0.40-0.52
Adult cis-women: 0.37-0.45
What are reticulocytes?
- Reticulocytes: immature RBCs just before and after leaving bone marrow
- 1-2% of circulating red blood cells in healthy people (but larger proprotion after haemorrhage)
- Reticulocytes change into mature RBCs ~1 day after entering circulation. Able to carry oxygen but not as efficiently as mature RBCs
- Called reticulocytes because of reticular (mesh-like) network of ribosomal RNA visible with methylene blue stain. Ribsomes enable reticulocytes to complete production of haemoglobin
Describe RBC metabolism&lifespan
- Mature RBCs have no nuclei or mitochondria
- Because of lack of nuclei and organelles, RBCs cannot divide or repair themselves- survive about 120 days
- Because no mitochondria RBCs cannot get energy by oxidative metabolism. But require ATP to maintain sodium pumps in cell membranes and for other ion pumping operations
- RBCs produce ATP by glycolysis: (conversion of glucose to pyruvate followed by conversion of pyruvate to lactic aci-less efficient than aerobic metabolism)
- RBC glucose uptake is mediated by Glut1 transporters. Glut 1 works by facilitated diffusion and not regulated by insulin
Describe the anti-oxidants of RBC
- Due to high pO2 in RBCs, NAD+ spontaneously formed from NADH (O2 took electron-oxidation)
- RBCs then use enzyme convert NAD+ to NADPH
- Formation of NADPH counteracts oxidative stress in RBCs. NADPH required for enzyme glutathione reductase which is required to maintain adequate cellular levels glutathione-key anti-oxidants
- RBCs also have Vitamin C-another anti-oxidant
Describe the role of G6PD (glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase)
Glutathione reductase requires NADPH, not NADP+ to work
- In cells throughout body there are multiplie pathways to regenerate NADPH
- But, in RBCs enzyme G6PD is key enzyme that regenerates NADPH from NADP+
- G6PD deficincy most common enzyme deficiency in world
Describe the strucutre of human haemoglobin.
- Human haemoglobin made up of four polypeptide subunits (globin chains), each with haem prosthetic group attached
- Four subunits bound to each other by salt bridges, hydrogen bond, and hydrophobic interactions
- Amino acid sequence of each subunit, and exact way subunits fit together, vital for porper haemoglobin function
Describe the structure of Haem.
- Porphyrin ring: large ring molecule consisting of 4 pyrroles (smaller rings made from 4 carbons and 1 nitrogen)
- Haem: porphyrin ring with iron atom bound
- Haem proteins: several enzymes contain haem
- Involved in chemical reactions requiring transfer of electron-oxidation or reduction
How does haem enable oxidation-reduction reactions?
- Histidine group underneath porphyrin ring binds one iron electron of a pair
- This leaves other one iron electron sticking up out of plane which can react with other molecules
- Electron-hungry oxygen molecule sees single unpaired electron sticking out haem and forms weak reversible bond
- Bond weak as oxygen molecule cannot get close enough to iron to fully remove electron due to steric hindrance from other parts of haemoglobin molecule