Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2023

First exams 2025

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Haemoglobin & Oxygen (HL) (HL IB Biology)

Revision Note

Marlene

Author

Marlene

Expertise

Biology

Foetal & Adult Haemoglobin

  • Haemoglobin is the molecule responsible for binding oxygen in our blood
    • They are globular proteins found in abundance in red blood cells
    • Each haemoglobin molecule consists of four polypeptide subunits
    • At the centre of each subunit is an iron-containing haem group with which oxygen combines
      • Each haem group can bind to one oxygen molecule
      • That means that each molecule of haemoglobin can transport four oxygen molecules
  • Oxygen is one of the gases found in air and each of these gases exerts a pressure
    • The pressure of each gas in a mixture of gases is called its partial pressure
    • The symbol for partial pressure is p, therefore the partial pressure of oxygen can be denoted as pO2
  • Due to the shape of the haemoglobin molecule it is difficult for the first oxygen molecule to bind to its haem group
  • However, after the first oxygen molecule binds, the haemoglobin protein changes shape, or conformation, making it easier for the next oxygen molecules to bind
    • This is known as cooperative binding
  • The ease with which haemoglobin binds and dissociates with oxygen can be described as its affinity for oxygen
    • In areas where there are high partial pressures of oxygen (such as the alveoli of the lungs), the affinity of haemoglobin for oxygen is high
      • This means haemoglobin and oxygen will bind easily
    • In areas where there are low partial pressures of oxygen (such as respiring muscle cells), the affinity of haemoglobin for oxygen is low
      • This means haemoglobin and oxygen will dissociate easily from each other
    • This ensures that haemoglobin can easily bind to oxygen in the lung capillaries to transport it to and then release it near respiring cells that require oxygen 

Foetal haemoglobin

  • The haemoglobin of a developing foetus has a higher affinity for oxygen than adult haemoglobin
  • This is vital as it allows a foetus to obtain oxygen from its mother's blood at the placenta
    • Foetal haemoglobin can bind to oxygen at low pO2
    • At this low pO2 the mother's haemoglobin is dissociating with oxygen
  • We can represent the percentage saturation of haemoglobin at different partial pressures of oxygen as a graph
    • This is called the oxygen dissociation curve
  • On a dissociation curve, the curve for foetal haemoglobin shifts to the left of that for adult haemoglobin
    • This means that at any given partial pressure of oxygen, foetal haemoglobin has a higher percentage saturation than adult haemoglobin
  • After birth, a baby begins to produce adult haemoglobin which gradually replaces foetal haemoglobin
    • This is important for the easy release of oxygen in the respiring tissues of a more metabolically active individual

Foetal and adult haemoglobin

Foetal haemoglobin has a higher affinity for oxygen; its oxygen dissociation curve therefore lies further to the left than the curve of adult haemoglobin

  • Haemoglobin has the ability to change shape, or conformation, once oxygen binds to it due to cooperative binding
    • Proteins like this are known as allosteric proteins as they can exist in multiple conformations
  • Carbon dioxide is an allosteric inhibitor of haemoglobin
    • This means that when it binds to haemoglobin, it is more difficult for oxygen to bind to haemoglobin as the protein cannot change its conformation
    • This lowers the affinity of haemoglobin for oxygen
  • Carbon dioxide has less of an allosteric effect on foetal haemoglobin
    • This enables foetal haemoglobin to have a higher affinity for oxygen even if carbon dioxide is bound to it

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