Haemoglobin Flashcards
What is haemoglobin?
• Group of chemically similar molecules found in a wide variety of organisms
How does the protein structure aid haemoglobin?
• Haemoglobins are protein molecules with a Quaternary structure that has evolved to make it efficient at loading oxygen under one set of conditions, but unloading under a different set of conditions
What is the primary structure?
Sequence of amino acids in the four polypeptide chains
What is the secondary structure?
• Sequence in which each of these polypeptide chains is coiled into a helix
What is the tertiary structure?
- All four polypeptides are linked together to form an almost spherical molecule
- Each polypeptide is associated with a haem group which contains iron
- Each iron ion can combine with a single oxygen molecule, meaning a haemoglobin can carry a total of four oxygen molecules
What gives haemoglobin its red colour?
Each chain having a haem group which contains an iron ion, which gives the haemoglobin its red colour
What is formed when oxygen joins haemoglobin?
Oxyhaemoglobin
What is loading oxygen?
- Process by which haemoglobin binds with oxygen
* In humans this occurs in the lungs
What is unloading?
- Process by which haemoglobin releases its oxygen
* In humans this takes place at the tissues
What is the role of haemoglobin?
- To transport oxygen
* Carried oxygen from the gas exchange surface to the tissues that required it for respiration
What is required for haemoglobin to be efficient at transportation of oxygen?
Must be able to :
• Readily associate with oxygen at the surface where gas exchange takes place
• Readily dissociate from oxygen at those tissues requiring it
How does affinity for oxygen change?
- Haemoglobin changes its affinity ( chemical attraction ) for oxygen under different conditions
- It achieves this because the shape changes in the presence of certain substances such as carbon dioxide
- In the presence of carbon dioxide new shape of the haemoglobin binds more loosely to oxygen
Why does haemoglobin have different shapes?
- Haemoglobin of different species has a slightly different tertiary and Quaternary structure and therefore different oxygen binding properties
- Depending on its structure haemoglobin can range from a having a high affinity for oxygen to those that have a low affinity in oxygen
How many oxygen molecules can join haemoglobin?
Four