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OXIGEN & CARBON DIOXIDE TRANSPORT

OXIGEN & CARBON DIOXIDE TRANSPORT. Biochemistry Departement Medical Faculty Of Andalas University Padang. Oxygen Transport. Total Body Oxygen Stores. Oxygen in the Lung (~500 ml O 2 ). Oxygen in the Blood (~850 ml O 2 ). Oxygen in the Cells (very little except Mb-bound).

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OXIGEN & CARBON DIOXIDE TRANSPORT

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  1. OXIGEN & CARBON DIOXIDE TRANSPORT Biochemistry Departement Medical Faculty Of Andalas University Padang

  2. Oxygen Transport

  3. Total Body Oxygen Stores • Oxygen in the Lung (~500 ml O2). • Oxygen in the Blood (~850 ml O2). • Oxygen in the Cells (very little except Mb-bound).

  4. At the Lung Level

  5. At the Tissue Level

  6. Oxygen Is Carried in Blood in 2 Forms • Bound to hemoglobin in red blood cells. • Dissolved in plasma. Normally insignificant.

  7. Hemoglobin • Each “heme” molecule is capable of binding with 1 O2 molecule and each “globin” molecule is capable of binding with 1 CO2 molecule. • So, each molecule of Hb can bind to either 4 molecules of O2 and 1 molecule of CO2 • 100 ml of blood has about 15 gm of Hb, at Hct = 0.45

  8. Binding of O2 to 4 heme sites given by:

  9. Oxygen as Oxyhemoglobin • Each gram of Hb can store about 1.34 ml of O2: • 1 L of blood (150 gm of Hb) can store about 208 ml of O2  Oxygen Capacity of Hb. • With normal cardiac output, about 1040 ml of O2 can be carried in blood per minute. (4 times of the metabolic demands).

  10. O2 Saturation. • Units: percent. • Fraction or percentage of all the hemoglobin binding sites that are currently occupied by oxygen.

  11. Oxygen Saturation of Hb

  12. Four (5-6?) Things Change Oxyhemoglobin Affinity • Hydrogen Ion Concentration, [H+] 2. Carbon Dioxide Partial Pressure, PCO2 3. Temperature 4. [2,3-DPG] 5. Special Case: Carbon Monoxide 6. Hemoglobin variants

  13. Factors Affecting Hb-O2 Affinity: Summary • Hydrogen Ion: • Increased H+ (decreased pH) increases H+ binding to Hb and reduces O2 affinity (HbO2+H+HbH++O2). • Carbon Dioxide (Bohr effect): • Increased PCO2 increases CO2 binding to Hb and reduces O2 affinity (increased O2 delivery to tissue). • Increased PCO2 increases H+ and reduces O2 affinity (fixed acid Bohr effect). • Temperature and 2,3-DPG (diphosphoglycerate): • Increased temperature and 2,3-DPG reduces O2 affinity.

  14. Effect of CO & Anemia on Hb-O2 Affinity Normal blood with Hb=15 gm/dl, anemia with Hb=7.5 gm/dl, and normal blood with 50% HbCO (carboxyhemoglobin).

  15. Exercise • Increase temperature • Increased PCO2 and • Decreased pH (acidosis)

  16. 2,3-DPG • 2,3-DPG is a glycolytic intermediate • accumulates to uniquely high levels in RBCs -Increased 2,3-DPG right shift -Decreased 2,3-DPG left shift • Increased 2,3-DPG associated with hypoxia.

  17. Conditions with Increased 2,3-DPG • acclimatization to high altitudes. • chronic lung disease; emphysema. • anemia. • hyperthyroidism. • right to left shunt. • congenital heart disease. • pulmonary vascular disease.

  18. Carbon Dioxide Transport

  19. At the Tissue Level

  20. At the Lung Level

  21. Carbon Dioxide Transport • CO2 is transported in blood in dissolved form, as bicarbonate ions, and as protein-bound carbamino compound. • Protein-bound CO2 (carbamino compounds): • Amount of CO2 stored as carbamino compounds is about 21 ml/L (4% of the total art CO2).

  22. Carbon Dioxide Transport • A majority amount of CO2 is transported in the form of bicarbonate ions (HCO3-): • Amount of CO2 in HCO3- form at PCO2=40 mmHg is about 420 ml/L (90% of the total arterial CO2).

  23. Carbon Dioxide Transport • Haldane Effect: Increasing O2-saturation reduces CO2 content and shifts the CO2 dissociation curve to right. This is because, increasing PO2 leads to : • Decrease in the formation of carbamino compound. • Release of H+ ions from the hemoglobin and resulting in dehydration of HCO3-.

  24. Carbon Dioxide Dissociation Curve Over the normal physiological range (PCO2 = 30 to 55 mmHg and PO2 = 40 to 100 mmHg), the CO2 equilibrium curve is nearly linear. But, O2 equilibrium curve is highly nonlinear.

  25. Bicarbonate in RBCs. • Carbonic anhydrase is present in RBCs • CO2 forms carbonic acid which dissociates to H+ and HCO3- • Released H+ is buffered by histidine residues (imidazole group) • Percent of the total PaCO2: 70%

  26. Carbamino Compounds in RBCs. • Approximately 30% of RBC contents is Hb • CO2 forms carbamino hemoglobin • Released H+ is buffered by histidine residues (imidazole group) • Percent of the total PaCO2: 23 %

  27. CO2Formation in Plasma • Carbamino compounds • CO2 binds the amine groups of plasma proteins to form carbamino compounds.

  28. O2 pickup CO2 release

  29. O2 release CO2 pickup

  30. Chloride Shift (Hamburger Shift) • Newly formed HCO3- passes out of RBC • Cl- diffuses into RBC to maintain electroneutrality • Chloride shift is rapid • Complete before the RBCs exit capillary

  31. Tissue-Gas Exchange: Summary • Gas exchange processes in the peripheral organs are essentially opposite those in the lungs. • O2 is released from the capillary blood to the tissues and diffuses to the mitochondria energy (ATP) through cellular metabolism. • CO2 diffuses from the tissues to the blood stream and is transported to the lungs for elimination. • The exchange of O2 and CO2 in the blood-tissue exchange unit depends on PO2, PCO2, and also on O2 and CO2 saturation curves.

  32. Resources • BIOEN 589: Integrative Physiology. Download 24 jan 05. • Kennelly, PJ., Rodwell, V W. Proteins: Myoglobin & Hemoglobin. In: Harper’s Illustrated Biochemistry. 27th Ed. 41- 8. • Miliefsky, M. Respiratory System Ch.23. Download 24 Nov 10. • Sheardown, H. Blood Biochemistry. McMaster University. Download 20 Mei 07. • Irvin, CG. Respiratory Physiology. Lecture 4A CO2 Transport. In: MEDICAL PHYSIOLOGY 30. Download 22 Jun 09. • Marks, DB., Marks, AD., Smith CM. Basic medical biochemistry: a clinical approach. 1996. Dalam: B.U. Pendit, penerjemah. Biokimia Kedokteran Dasar: Sebuah Pendekatan Klinis. Eds. J. Suyono., V. Sadikin., L.I. Mandera. Jakarta: EGC, 2000 • R.K. Murray, D.K. Granner, P.A. Mayes, V.W. Rodwell Harper’s Biochemistry. 27th ed. McGraw-Hill Companies, New York. 2006.

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