module 3 - 8.4 transport of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the blood Flashcards

1
Q

what does affinity mean?

A

tendency to bind to oxygen

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2
Q

what is the affinity of haemoglobin for oxygen?

A

high

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3
Q

at high partial pressures of oxygen, what happens to the haemoglobin?

A

it will bind to the oxygen forming oxyhaemoglobin

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4
Q

what happens to oxygen at high/ low concentration?

A

high conc. - oxygen binds to haemoglobin
low conc. - oxygen dissociates to haemoglobin

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5
Q

what is the equation for oxyhaemoglobin?

A

——————————affinity————————————->
Hb + 4O2 ⇌ Hb(O2)4
haemoglobin + oxygen ⇌ oxyhaemoglobin
<—————————dissociation———————————

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6
Q

what is partial pressure?

A

measuring concentration of gas when mixed with another gas

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7
Q

what is haemoglobins oxygen dissociation curve?

A

it is a sigmoid curve and plateau’s when all haemoglobin is oxyghaemoglobin

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8
Q

at respiring tissue or capillary beds, what is pO2?

A

low, so haemoglobin dissociates its oxygen to 20-25% saturation

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9
Q

what happens as oxygen binds to one monomer of Hb?

A

molecules shift from tense to relaxed state

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10
Q

what does the shift from tense to relaxed state promote?

A

promotes the binding of oxygen to remaining 3 monomer’s haem group thus saturating the Hb molecule with oxygen

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11
Q

what is cooperative binding?

A

the first oxygen molecule binds and changes structure of haemoglobin molecule, makes it easier for each successive oxygen molecule to bind

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12
Q

what happens when oxygen starts binding to the haemoglobin?

A

the alpha bonds start breaking

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13
Q

when does the dissociation from oxyghaemoglobin to haemoglobin occur?

A

doesn’t happen until capillaries

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14
Q

where is the highest concentration of oxygen?

A

lungs

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15
Q

where is oxygen concentration low?

A

in capillaries - its used for respiration

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16
Q

what is deoxygenated haemoglobin?

A

haemoglobin without the bound oxygen

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17
Q

how is the difference of absorption between oxy & deoxyhaemoglobin?

A

oxy - lower
deoxy - higher
measured with pulse oximeter

18
Q

what is the Bohr effect?

A
  • helps oxyhaemoglobin to dissociate and get oxygen more easily
  • it describes how high pCO2 affects Hb’s affinity for oxygen
19
Q

what does CO2 in the plasma form?

A

carbonic acid, this lowers pH of blood, causes oxyHb to dissociate its oxygen

20
Q

what happens in respiring tissue? (to do with Bohr effect)

A

where pCO2 is high, Hb releases O2 more easily

21
Q

what happens in the lungs? to do with Bohr effect)

A
  • decrease in CO2 causes increase in blood pH (Hb releases O2 more easily)
  • where pCO2 is low, Hb binds to oxygen more easily
22
Q

where is CO2 the highest and what does this cause?

A
  • highest in cells/respiring tissue
  • diffuses down conc. gradient to lungs then to air
23
Q

what molecules trigger the Bohr effect?

A
  • carbon dioxide
  • lactic acid
24
Q

why does lactic acid trigger the Bohr effect?

A
  • lactic acid is produced when cells don’t have enough oxygen
  • this increases acidity of blood more than CO2
  • cells need more oxygen
25
Q

what produces carbonic acid?

A

when CO2 is dissolved in plasma

26
Q

how do you know how strong the Bohr effect is?

A

steeper gradient, stronger Bohr effect

27
Q

why do marine animals need to have a strong Bohr effect?

A

they need to dive down deep and allows for nearly all oxygen to dissociate and supply the body

28
Q

where is fetal haemoglobin found?

A

red blood cells and is involved in transporting oxygen from mothers bloodstream to organs and tissues in foetus

29
Q

fetal haemoglobin has a different composition from adult haemoglobin, what does this allow?

A

allows oxygen to bind more strongly, higher affinity for O2
- developing foetus is able to retrieve oxygen from mothers bloodstream

30
Q

what does the structure and behaviour of lugworm enable for the organism?

A

to thrive in low-oxygen environment

31
Q

what is the water flow like through the burrow when submerged by tide?

A

continuous

32
Q

how does oxygen diffuse in a lugworm?

A

through the gills and body surface

33
Q

what are the differences between human and lugworm haemoglobin?

A
  • lugworm reaches a high saturation at much lower partial pressure to that of man
  • dissociation curve is shifted to the left and lugworm has very high affinity for O2
  • lugworm haemoglobin shows no Bohr shift
34
Q

what is myoglobin?

A

an oxygen-binding protein found in skeletal muscle tissue of vertebrates and mammals

35
Q

what is the difference in functions between haemoglobin and myoglobin?

A

haemoglobin - transports oxygen
myoglobin - store oxygen

36
Q

what does high concentrations of myoglobin in muscle cells allow?

A

allows organisms to hold their breath for a longer period of time
- diving mammals have muscles with high abundance of myoglobin

37
Q

what 3 ways can carbon dioxide be transported?

A
  1. dissolved in plasma as CO2
  2. combined with amino groups of haemoglobin to form CARBAMINOHAEMOGLOBIN
  3. converted to hydrogen carbonate ions (HCO3-) in cytoplasm of RBCs and then transported to plasma as HCO3-
38
Q

what is the Haldane Effect?

A
  • oxygenation of blood in the lungs displaces CO2 from haemoglobin which increases removal of carbon dioxide from blood
  • this means oxygenated blood has a reduced affinity for carbon dioxide
39
Q

where does most carbon dioxide diffuse into?

A

the cytoplasm of erythrocytes

40
Q

what does carbonic anhydrase do?

A

converts carbon dioxide and water into carbonic acid which then dissociates into hydrogen carbonate and hydrogen ions

41
Q

what is the chloride shift?

A
  • HCO3- ions leave the erythrocytes and enter plasma by diffusion
  • to maintain electrochemical balance, chloride ions are imported into erythrocytes
42
Q

what is haemoglobonic acid?

A
  • H+ producsed by dissociation of carbonic acid bind with haemoglobin in RBCs - this forms heamoglobonic acid
  • haemoglobin acts as a buffer to maintain blood pH