Haemoglobin - A6 Flashcards

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1
Q

Where is haemoglobin found?

A

It is found in red blood cells

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2
Q

What is the role of haemoglobin?

A

To carry oxygen

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3
Q

What is the structure of haemoglobin?

A

Hb is a large protein(quaternary) made up of 4 polypeptide chains

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4
Q

What is the structure of the polypeptide chains?

A

Each chain contains 1 haem group, containing iron - therefore each haemoglobin can carry 4 oxygen atoms

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5
Q

How does oxyhaemoglobin form?

A

-In the lungs, oxygen associates/loads(bonds/joins) to Hb in RBCs to form oxyhaemoglobin in the lungs
-This is reversible as near body cells, oxygen disassociates/unloads(leaves) and oxyhaemoglobin is converted back into haemoglobin at respiring tissue

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6
Q

What does haemoglobin have an affinity for?

A

-Hb has an affinity for oxygen ->Hb has a tendency to bind to O2
-Hb’s affinity varies depending on the condition it’s in

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7
Q

What is partial pressure of oxygen?

A

-pO2 is just a measure of oxygen conc. - the greater the conc. of oxygen, the higher the partial pressure.
-partial pressure of oxygen is one of the conditions that affects Hb’s affinity for O2

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8
Q

Does oxygen load onto haemoglobin when there’s a high or low partial pressure?

A

It loads when theres a high partial pressure and unloads when there’s a low partial pressure.

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9
Q

When the partial pressure is high, does the oxygen load/ unload, and what is the affinity like?

A

partial pressure - high
affinity - high
loads

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10
Q

When the partial pressure is low, does the oxygen load/unload, and what is the affinity like?

A

partial pressure - low
affinity - low
unloads

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11
Q

What does an oxygen disassociation curve show?

A

It shows how saturated the haemoglobin is at any given partial pressure

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12
Q

How does saturation effect haemoglobin’s affinity for oxygen?
(sigmoidal curve and cooperative binding)

A

-When Hb binds to the first molecule of O2, the tertiary structure of the Hb alters, which uncovers another binding site, making it easier for other O2 molecules to bind.
-Then as the Hb becomes more saturated it becomes harder for O2 to bind.
-This causes the steep section in the middle of the graph where it’s really easy for the O2 to bind.

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13
Q

How does the partial pressure of carbon dioxide affect the affinity?

A

-At high pCO2, Hb had a lower affinity for O2 and unloads more readily.
-At high pCO2 causes a shift of the disassociation line to the right, known as the Bohr effect
-This is good because there is usually a high pCO2 near aerobically respiring cells which need more O2
-at higher pCO2, the haemoglobin has a lower affinity for oxygen at the same pO2, therefore oxygen unloads more readily to respiring tissue to be used for aerobic respiration

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14
Q

Why does a high pCO2 create a lower affinity for oxygen?

A

-CO2 diffuses into blood and becomes carbonic acid
-this makes the blood more acidic(because carbonic acid disassociates and releases H+)
-This alters(the hydrogen bonding in)the secondary and tertiary structures of haemoglobin
-reducing haemoglobin’s affinity for oxygen=increased unloading at the same pO2

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15
Q

Why are there different types of haemoglobin?

A

-Different types of haemoglobin, in different organisms, have different oxygen transporting capacities
-this depends on: where the organism lives, how active the animal is, how big the animal is

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16
Q

What effect does size have on Hb’s affinity?

A

-smaller organisms have a high SA;Vol, so lose heat energy at a faster rate
-These organisms need to perform more aerobic respiration as it’s an exothermic process to release heat energy to maintain the body temperature
-so Hb must have a lower affinity to unload more oxygen at the same pO2
-So oxyhaemoglobin disassociation curve shifts to the right