catabolism of haem Flashcards

1
Q

haemoglobin definition

A

an iron containing oxygen-transport metalloprotein in red blood cells

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2
Q

haem definition

A

non-protein prosthetic group found in haemoglobin

a coordination complex consisting of an iron ion coordinated to a porphyrin

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3
Q

where does degradation begin + explained?

A

senescent erythrocytes are removed from circulation in the spleen

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4
Q

explain degradation of haem

A
  1. haem reduced to biliverdin by heme oxygenase using NADPH
  2. iron is reduced from the molecule and CO
  3. biliverdin is converted to bilirubin by biliverdin reductase
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5
Q

explain transport of bilirubin

A

bilirubin is transported into the liver by facilitated diffusion, bound to albumin

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6
Q

how is bilirubin made water soluble?

A

conjugated with glucuronic acid to become more water soluble

catalysed by UDP-glucuronosyltransferase

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7
Q

excretion of bilirubin explained

A

excreted from the liver in bile

intestinal bacteria deconjugate bilirubin so it can be absorbed by intestinal cells and transported to kidneys with urine

the remainder travels down digestive tract and is converted to stercobilinogen, oxidised to stercobilin and excreted- forming brown colour of faeces

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8
Q

what signifies hyperbilirubinaemia?

A

jaundice- yellowing colour

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9
Q

what does indirect bilirubin show in a blood test?

A

the amount of unconjugated bilirubin created from red blood cell breakdown

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10
Q

what does direct bilirubin show?

A

conjugated bilirubin, which means it has been processed by the liver

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11
Q

what would results mean?

A

high indirect bilirubin- body breaking down too many RBCs, haemolytic anamia

low indirect bilirubin- fine

high direct bilirubin - liver isn’t clearing bilirubin properly - going to the blood instead of bile

low direct - fine

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12
Q

common causes for elevated conjugated bilirubin

A

liver not working properly = hepatitis, Gilbert’s, cirrhosis, biliary stricture, cancer

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13
Q

common causes for elevated unconjugated bilirubin

A

hemolytic anemia- too many blood cells being destroyed from an autoimmune disease

transfusion reaction

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