Week 8 Flashcards

1
Q

What determines oxygen diffusing capacity in the lungs?

A
  • Surface area
  • capillarity
  • Barrier thickness
  • Volume of lungs
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2
Q

What determines oxygen diffusion capacity in peripheral tissues?

A
  • Endothelium thickness
  • Capillarity
  • Mitochondrial location
  • cell size
  • hematocrit concentration
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3
Q

CO2 Transport

A
  • Occurs in the opposite direction
  • Venous PCO2 affected by blood flow and metabolism (at given blood flow VCO2 is greater with greater metabolic rate)
  • Blood CO2 content is determined by PCO2 haemoglobin and carbonic anhydrase
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4
Q

Haemoglobin

A
  • Tetramer composed of 4 subunits (2 alpha-globin chains and 2 beta globin chains)
  • Each subunit is structurally similar to myoglobin a monomeric O2 binding protein in muscle
  • Each subunit contains a Fe2+ containing heme ring structure that binds 1 O2
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5
Q

Haemoglobin-O2 binding curve

A
  • sigmoidal shape due to cooperative O2 binding (binding of 1 O2 leads to change is protien conformation that facilitates the binding of additional O2 - T to R)
  • Interactions between subunits contribute to cooperativity. It is not exhibited by monomeric globin’s
  • R state is more open and relaxed
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6
Q

Haemoglobin-O2 hill equation

A

Haeoglobin saturation= PO2^n/(P50^n+PO2^n)
- Where n describes cooperativity
- P50 is a metric of Hb-O2 affinity
- With no cooperativity, the equation becomes like the standard michaelis-menten equation

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7
Q

Negative Allosteric Modifiers

A
  • RBC contain ligands that bind Hb and decrease Hb-O2 affintiy
  • Hb-O2 affinity of whole body is much lower than isolated Hb
  • Ligands usually bind far from heme (N- and C-termini of globin chains, central cavity of tetramer)
  • These ligands favor and are bound in T-state, released in R-state
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8
Q

Haemoglobin and blood O2 content

A

Most of the O2 in blood is bound to haemoglobin due to the low solubility of O2 in water/plasma
- Hb-O2 saturation and the concentration of Hb in the blood determines blood O2 content
- Hb is almost fully saturated in blood leaving the lungs and partially deoxygenated after leaving peripheral tissues

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9
Q

Bohr Effect

A
  • CO2 and H+ are also Hb ligands and negative allosteric modifiers of Hb-O2 binding
  • CO2 partial pressures increase and pH decreases as blood travels through capillaries
  • Bohr effect amplifies the release of O2 form Hb in peripheral tissues
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10
Q

Temperature Effect

A

Increased temperature decreases Hb-O2 binding

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11
Q

What causes a rightward shift in the hemoglobin saturation curve

A
  1. Increase in H+
  2. Increase in CO2
  3. Increase in temperature
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12
Q

How does the hemoglobin saturation curve in atrial blood compare to venous blood at rest and at exercise

A

Venous blood at rest is right shifted compared to atrial and during exercise the shift is increased

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13
Q

What are the 3 forms that CO2 is transported in through the blood

A
  1. Dissolved in plasma and cytoplasm (7%)
  2. Bound to Hb (Carbamion-CO2) (23%)
  3. Bicarbonate - 70%
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14
Q

How is CO2 carried through the blood by bicarbonate

A
  • Carbonic anhydrase is the second most abundant protein in red blood cells
  • Catalyzes the reaction CO2 + H2O = HCO3- + H+
  • Bicarbonate is equilibrated between cytoplasm and plasma via HCO3-/Cl- exchanger
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15
Q

Haldane Effect

A

Total CO2 content of blood depends on O2
- There is an interaction between the binding of O2 and of CO2/H+ on hemoglobin
- As PO2 decrease, it increase CO2 loading and decreases hemoglobin’s affinity for O2
- Leads to O2 unloading

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16
Q

Direct effect of changes in PO2 on O2 loading

A

As PO2 increases O2 loading increases and vice versa

17
Q

Effects of change in PCO2

A

Increased PCO2 causes increased CO2 loading and increase in H+ ions