Zusammenfassung der Ressource
7.2 Transport of Oxygen by Haemoglobin
- Oxygen Dissociation Curves - The shape of the Curve
- When hgb is exposed to different partial pressures
of oxygen, it doesn't bind the oxygen evenly
- The shape of the hgb = difficult for the first
oxygen molecule to bind to one of its sites
on its four polypeptide sub units as they're
closely united
- Therefore a low oxygen concentrations, little oxygen bind to haemoglobin.
- Shallow gradient initially
- The binding of the 1st oxygen
molecule changed the
quarternary structure of the hgb
molecule, causing it to change
shape.
- This makes it easier for other
subunits to bind to an oxygen
molecule.
- It therefore takes a smaller increase in the partial
pressure of oxygen to bind the second oxygen molecule
than it did to bind the first one. This is known as POSITIVE
COOPERATIVITY because binding on the first molecule
makes binding on the 2nd one easier.
- The gradient of the curve steepens
- After the binding of the 3rd molecule, the
situation changes as it is harder for the hgb
to bind to the fourth oxygen molecule. This
is simply due to probability as with more
sites occupied it is less likely to find a site to
bind to.
- The gradient of the curve reduces and the graph flattens off.
- Oxygen Dissociation Curves - The Placement of the curve with the axes
- The further to the left the curve is...
- The greater the affinity of hgb for oxygen (so it loads oxygen readily but unloads less easily)
- The further to the right the curve is...
- The lower the affinity of hgb for oxygen ( so it loads oxygen less readily, but unloads oxygen more easily)
- Effects of CO2 concentration
- Low carbon dioxide concentration
shifts the oxygen dissociation curve
to the left.
- Medium carbon
dioxide concentration
has an oxygen
dissociation curve that
is in the middle
- High carbon dioxide
concentration shifts the
oxygen dissociation curve
to the right
- Loading, transport and unloading of oxygen
- At the gas exchange
surface cxarbon dioxide is
constantly being removed
- The pH is slightly
raised due to the
low concentration of
carbon dioxide
- The higher pH
changes the shape
of hgb into one that
enables it to load
oxygen readily
- This shape
also increases
the affinity of
hgb for
oxygen, so it
isn't released
while being
transported in
to blood to the
tissues
- In this tissues, carbon
dioxide is produced
by respiring cells
- Carbon dioxide is
acidic in
solution, so the
pH of the blood
within the
tissues is
lowered
- The lower pH
changes the
shape of hgb
into one with
a lower
affinity for
oxygen.
- Hgb releases its
oxygen into the
respiring tissues
- Basically, the more active a tissue, the more oxygen is unloaded.
- as higher rate of respiration
- tissues produce more CO2
- lower pH
- greater hgb shape change
- more readily O2 unloaded
- more O2 available for respiration
- Size matters
- Mice are small and therefore have a large surface area to
volume ratio. As a result they tend to loose heat rapidly
when the environmental temperature is lower than their
body temperature.
- So to maintain the body heat, the tissues repire more and
oxygen is more easily released from hgb to the tissues