Carriage of Oxygen Flashcards

1
Q

What is oxidation?

A

Loss of electrons –> releases energy

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2
Q

What is reduction?

A

Gain of electrons –> requires energy

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3
Q

How is haemoglobin chemically adapted to carry oxygen?

A

Combines rapidly and reversibly without becoming oxidised

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4
Q

Why is oxygen a difficult molecule to transport?

A

Powerful oxidising agent

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5
Q

What are reticulocytes?

A

Immature red blood cells (just left bone marrow) - have mesh-like rRNA network

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6
Q

Why do erythrocytes require ATP?

A

To maintain Na+ pumps in membrane, so they make ATP via glycolysis (glucose –> pyruvate)

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7
Q

What is methaemoglobin?

A

Oxidised form of haemoglobin after much oxygen exposure (prior to breakdown) which cannot carry oxygen

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8
Q

How many unpaired electrons does oxygen have?

A

4

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9
Q

How many unpaired electrons does Fe2+ have?

A

6

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10
Q

Describe the chemical structure of haemoglobin

A

Ferrous iron (Fe2+) is core molecule:
4 bonds go to nitrogen groups (covalent) with haem attached
1 bond goes to histidine amino acid below
1 bond is free to bind to oxygen

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11
Q

What is steric hindrance?

A

3D folding of haemoglobin prevents oxygen molecule getting close enough to the ferrous iron to remove the spare electron (prevents oxidation –> reversible bond)

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12
Q

Describe the molecular structure of haemoglobin

A

4 subunits (2 alpha, 2 beta) bound together by salt bridges, hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions with prosthetic haem attached

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13
Q

What happens to methaemoglobin?

A

May be converted back to functioning oxygen-carrying capacity by NADH-dependent methaemoglobin reductase (if newly formed) or broken down in liver/spleen

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14
Q

Describe the structure of foetal haemoglobin

A

2 gamma subunits with higher affinity for oxygen than adult haemoglobin

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15
Q

What may affect the ability of haemoglobin to bind to oxygen?

A

pH, partial pressure of CO2 etc

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16
Q

Describe sickle cell disease

A

Defective form of haemoglobin formed (haemoglobin S) which has mutant beta subunits, causes RBCs to change shape to sickle-shaped which may stack and block blood vessels

17
Q

Describe thalassaemia

A

Inherited autosomal recessive blood disease which results in less/no globin chains which make up haemoglobin –> abnormal RBCs –> reduction of oxygen transport –> anaemia

18
Q

Describe the oxygen dissociation curve

A

S shaped

19
Q

How does temperature affect the oxygen dissociation curve?

A
High temp (metabolising tissue) - curve moves right to unload more oxygen at any given partial pressure
Low temp (slow metabolism) - curve may more left, so less oxygen is given up --> hypoxia and fatigue
20
Q

How does pH affect the oxygen dissociation curve?

A

Bohr shift - curve moves to the right with lower pH (more acidic from CO2 production) –> greater oxygen unload

21
Q

How does carbon monoxide affect the oxygen dissociation curve?

A

Greater affinity for haemoglobin than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin –> death by hypoxia may result

22
Q

What is myoglobin?

A

Form of haemoglobin found in muscle, it’s single subunit and has greater oxygen affinity than haemoglobin (so O2 is transferred in capillaries)

23
Q

What is rhabdomyolysis?

A

When myoglobin is released from damaged muscle tissue

24
Q

How may rhabdomyolysis cause acute renal failure?

A

Released myoglobin from muscle damage is filtered by kidney but is toxic to renal tube epithelia so can cause kidney failure

25
Q

What is haematocrit?

A

Percentage of blood that is red blood cells

26
Q

What controls red blood cell production?

A

Erythropoietin (EPO) produced by kidneys and liver.

If kidney is hypoxic –> EPO increased

27
Q

In what ways is carbon dioxide removed from respiring cells?

A

Diffuses into water/plasma, converted to bicarbonate (carbonic anhydrase) and carried in plasma, carboxyhaemoglobin (direct binding to haemoglobin)

28
Q

Which ion maintains electroneutrality with bicarbonate movement in and out of cells?

A

Chloride (Cl-)