S14 Protein Function - Oxygen Transport Flashcards

1
Q

Why is the structure of haem as it is?

A

To allow oxygen to bind

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2
Q

How is the Fe atom bound to Hb?

A

Bound via a histidine residue on the side of the ring

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3
Q

Is myoglobin large or small?

A

Small (153 amino acids (100 or more classes as a protein))

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4
Q

What does binding of oxygen mean happens to the plane in myoglobin?

A

Oxygen binding causes movement of Fe into the plane of the ring (causes a small change in protein conformation that has no major effects)

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5
Q

What type of curve is seen with oxygen binding to myoglobin?

A

Hyperbolic

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6
Q

What type of curve is seen with oxygen binding to Hb?

A

Sigmoidal

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7
Q

How many polypeptide chains is Hb made up of?

What about myoglobin?

A

2

1

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8
Q

What are the two states of Hb?

A

T - low affinity state

R - high affinity state

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9
Q

Which state does oxygen binding promote the stabilisation of?

A

The R state

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10
Q

What does binding of 2,3-BPG do to Hb?

A

Decreases Hb affinity of oxygen

BPG conc increases at high altitudes, promotes oxygen release at the tissues

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11
Q

What does binding of carbon dioxide and H+ do to Hb affinity for oxygen? What is its significance?

A

Lower the affinity (Bohr effect)

H+ and CO2 produced by metabolically active tissues - the Bohr affect means that delivery of O2 is coupled with demand

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12
Q

What is the affect of carbon monoxide poisoning on Hb?

A

Binds to the Fe in Hb (ferroHb) and blocks oxygen transport as CO can bind more readily than O2

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13
Q

What are the polypeptide chains in HbA, HbF and HBA2?

A

HbA - alpha 2 and beta 2
HbF - alpha 2 and gamma 2
HbA2 - alpha 2 and delta 2

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14
Q

What is the most common Hb in human adults?

A

HbA (90%)

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15
Q

What is the importance of foetal Hb (HbF)?

A

It is the major Hb in foetal blood

It has a higher binding affinity for oxygen than HbA which allows transfer of oxygen to the foetal blood supply from the mother

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16
Q

Which direction does the curve shift for increased affinity?

A

To the left

17
Q

What mutation causes sickle cell anaemia?

A

Mutation of glutamate to valine in the beta globin (HbS)

18
Q

What does the mutation Glu —> Val cause in Hb?

A

A sticky hydrophobic pocket (Val is hydrophobic, Glu isn’t) which allows HbS to polymerise.

19
Q

What are sickled cells prone to? What is their structure?

A

More prone to lyse

More rigid (block microvasculature e.g. capillaries)

20
Q

What are thalassaemias?

A

A group of genetic disorders where there is an imbalance between the number of alpha and beta globin chains

21
Q

What is beta-thalassaemia? What form of Hb takes over?

A
  • decreased/absent beta-globin chain production
  • alpha chains unable to form stable tetramers
  • symptoms appear after birth

(Major is both beta globins missing, minor is only one missing)

HbF takes over (not ideal in high amounts)

22
Q

What is alpha-thalassaemia?

A
  • decreased or absent alpha globin chain production
  • different levels of severity due to multiple copies of the alpha chains present (alpha 1 and alpha 2)
  • beta chains can form stable tetramers with increased affinity for oxygen
  • onset before birth
23
Q

What are the different levels of severity for alpha thalassaemia?

A
  1. Normal - 2 alpha-1, 2 alpha-2
  2. Silent carrier - 1 alpha-1, 2 alpha-2
  3. Alpha-thalassaemia trait (heterozygous clinically mild) - no alpha-1, 2 alpha-2
  4. Alpha-thalassaemia trait (heterozygous clinically mild) - 1 alpha-1, 1 alpha-2
  5. HbH disease (clinically severe) - 1 alpha-2
  6. Hydrops fetalis (fatal after birth) - none
24
Q

How many haem subunits make up HbA?

A

4 haem containing subunits - 2 alpha, 2 beta