Give the key features of haemoglobin.
Many organisms have haemoglobin to transport oxygen and the type varies depending on their needs. Haemoglobin is highly adapted for transporting oxygen.
Describe the structure of haemoglobin.
Describe briefly how oxygen and haemoglobin interact.
Describe the key terms surrounding the action of haemoglobin and where these terms occur.
Why is haemoglobin important for the circulatory system?
What is important about haemoglobin in different organisms?
What does affinity mean in terms of haemoglobin (define affinity)?
What role does haemoglobin have and what features mechanics does it have to achieve this?
What is the oxygen disassociation curve? Draw it and explain.
How does hemoglobin’s affinity vary with regards to pO2?
What happens at different partial pressures with haemoglobin?
At different partial pressures of oxygen haemoglobin loads, transports and unloads oxygen.
Describe step by step the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve and draw it.
Hint: 3 Steps
Why does the shape of oxygen dissociation curves vary?
What does an oxyhemoglobin curve moving left or right mean?
Describe and name the effect of CO2 on haemoglobin include. the effect on the oxygen dissociation curve.
Why is the effect of CO2 on haemoglobin in organisms important?
Why might pCO2 per breath not change during intense exercise?
During periods of high exercise, pCO2 may not change per breath as breathing rate or tidal volume may increase instead.
Describe the gas exchange process of haemoglobin.
(Hint: 5 steps)
How does the gas exchange process change? And why is this important?
Why is not all haemoglobin saturated and describe the saturation of haemoglobin at different stages?
What are the features of different haemoglobins in different organisms
Why are there different types of haemoglobin?
What causes haemoglobin to have different properties and what are these properties?
What determines the type of haemoglobin and organism has?