Term
___________, with its single heme prosthetic group, exhibits a hyperbolic O2-binding curve. |
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Definition
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Term
___________ can adopt the deoxy (T) or oxy (R) conformation, which differ in O2-binding affinity. |
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Definition
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Term
The _________ effect and ________ alter hemoglobin's O2-binding affinity. |
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Definition
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Term
____________ can change hemoglobin's O2-binding properties and cause disease. |
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Definition
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Term
__________, the first protein whose structure was determined by X-ray crystallography, is a small protein with relatively simple oxygen-binding behavior. |
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Definition
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Term
___________, a tetramer of myoglobin-like polypeptides, is a more complicated protein that functions as a sophisticated system for delivering oxygen to tissues throughout the body. |
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Definition
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Term
Hemoglobin is a monomeric Oxygen-binding protein. true false |
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Definition
false. myoglobin is monomeric oxygen-binding protein. |
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Term
_____________ is a small intracellular protein in vertebrate muscle. |
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Definition
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Term
Myoglobin's X-ray structure, determined by John Kendrew in 1959, revealed that most of myoglobin's 153 residues are members of _______ alpha helices (traditionally labeled A through H) that are arranged to form a ____________ protein with approximate dimensions of 44x44x25 A. |
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Definition
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Term
Structure of sperm whale myoglobin. This 153-residue monomeric protein consists of eight helices, labeled A through H, that are connected by short ____________ links (the last half of what was originally thought to be the EF corner has been shown to form a short helix that is designated the F' helix). |
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Definition
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Term
The _________ group is shown in red. |
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Definition
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Term
The heme group. The central _______ atom is shown liganded to the ______ N atoms of the _________ ring, whose pyrrole group are labeled A-D. |
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Definition
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Term
The heme is a ____________ system, so all the Fe-N bonds are _________. |
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Definition
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Term
The Fe(II) is also liganded to a ____ side chain and, when it is present, to ____. |
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Definition
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Term
Refering to the heme group; the six ligands are arranged at the corners of an ___________ centered on the Fe ion (octahedral geometry). |
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Definition
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Term
Myoglobin contains a heme ________ group. |
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Definition
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Term
Myoglobin, other members of the globin family of proteins, and a variety of other proteins such as cytochrome c all contain a single ______ group. |
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Definition
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Term
The _________ is tightly wedged in a hydrophobic pocket between the E and F helices in myoglobin. |
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Definition
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Term
The heterocyclic ring system of heme is a ___________ derivative containing four ________ groups linked by methane bridges. |
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Definition
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Term
Porphyrins vary in the substituents attached to rings _______. |
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Definition
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Term
The Fe(II) atom at the center of heme is __________ by four porphyrin N atoms and one Nfrom a His side chain. |
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Definition
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Term
His F8 is the _______ residue of the F helix. |
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Definition
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Term
A molecule of __________ can act as a sixth ligand to the iron atom. |
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Definition
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Term
His ____ hydrogen bonds to the O2. |
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Definition
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Term
Two hydrophobic side chains on the O2-binding side of the heme, ________ and ________, help hold the hem in place. |
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Definition
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Term
This side chains (Val E11 and Phe CD1) presumably swing aside as the protein __________, allowing O2 to enter and exit. |
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Definition
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Term
When exposed to oxygen, the Fe(II) atom of isolated heme is irreversibly oxidized to ________, a form that cannot bind O2. |
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Definition
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Term
___________ alters the electronic state of the Fe(II)-heme complex, as indicated by its color change from dark purple to brillian scarlet. |
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Definition
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Term
The color of hemoglobin in venous blood is _____________. |
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Definition
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Term
The color of hemoglobin in arterial blood is _______________. |
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Definition
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Term
Under some conditions, the Fe(II) of myoglobin or hemoglobin becomes oxidized to Fe(III) to form ____________ or ______________, respectively. |
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Definition
metmyoglobin methemoglobin |
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Term
These proteins are responsible for the brown color of old meat and dried blood? _____________ and ______________ |
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Definition
metmyoglobin and methemoglobin |
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Term
In addition to O2, certain other small molecules such as ____, _____ and _____ can bind to heme groups in proteins. |
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Definition
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Term
Those compounds like CO, NO, and H2S bind with lower affinity than O2? yes no |
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Definition
no. These compunds bind with much higher affinity than O2, which accounts for their toxicity. |
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Term
_________ binds O2 to facilitate its diffusion. |
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Definition
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Term
Myoglobin major physiological role is to _________oxygen diffusion in _______. |
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Definition
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Term
The most rapidly respiring tissue under conditions of high exertion are __________. |
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Definition
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Term
The rate at which O2 can ___________ from the capillaries to the tissues is limited by its low _____________ in aqueous solution. |
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Definition
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Term
___________ increases the effective solubility of O2 in muscle cells, acting as a kind of molecular ___________ brigade to boost the O2 diffusion rate. |
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Definition
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Term
The ____________ function of myoglobin is probably significant only in aquatic mammals such as seals and whales, whose muscle myoglobin concentrations are around 10-fold greater than those in terrestrial mammals. |
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Definition
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Term
Vertebrates also express two recently discovered globins: ______________, which is present mainly in brain, retina, and endocrine tissues, and ________, which occurs in most tissues. |
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Definition
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Term
___________ protects neurons (nerve cells) from damage under conditions of __________ (inadequate blood flow, such as in a stroke), most likely by preventing ___________________ (the damage caused by the oxygen radicals generated when blood flow is restored). |
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Definition
Neuroglobin ischemia reperfusion-injury |
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Term
Myoglobin's Oxygen-binding curve is ____________. |
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Definition
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Term
The reversible binding of O2 to myoglobin (Mb)is described by a simple equilibrium reaction: |
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Definition
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Term
The dissociation constant, K, for the reaction Mb+O2<-->MbO2 is: |
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Definition
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Term
The O2 dissociation of myoglobin can be characterized by its _____________ _________, Yo2, which is defined as the fraction of O2-binding sites occupied by O2. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Yo2 ranges from ______(when no O2 is bound to the myoglobin molecule) to ____ (when the binding sites of all the myoglobin molecules are occupied). |
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Definition
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Term
Since O2 is a gas, its concentration is conveniently expressed by its __________ ________, PO2 (also called the oxygen tension). |
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Definition
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Term
This equation describes a rectangular hyperbola and is identical in form to the equation that describes a hormone binding to its cell-surface receptor or a small molecular substrate binding to the active site of an enzyme. |
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Definition
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Term
Myoglobin is half-saturated with O2 (YO2=0.5) at an oxygen partial pressure (pO2) of _____ torr. |
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Definition
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Term
At low pO2, very little O2 binds to myoglobin. true false |
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Definition
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Term
As the pO2 decreases, more O2 binds to myoglobin. true false |
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Definition
false. As the pO2 increases, more O2 binds to myoglobin |
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Term
At very high pO2, virtually all the O2-binding sites are occupied and myoglobin is said to be _________ with O2. |
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Definition
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Term
The steepness of the hyperbola for a simple binding event, such as O2 binding to myglobin, increases as the value of K ______________. |
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Definition
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Term
The lower the value of K, the _______ is the binding. |
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Definition
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Term
K is equivalent to the concentration of ligand at which _____ of the binding sites are occupied. |
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Definition
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Term
When pO2 = K, myoglobin is ______________ with oxygen. |
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Definition
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Term
At what oxygen concentration will myoglobin be 75% saturated with oxygen? |
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Definition
Yo2 = pO2/p50+pO2
pO2= Yo2(p50+pO2) pO2=Yo2p50 + Yo2pO2 pO2 - Yo2pO2 = Yo2p50 pO2 = Yo2p50/(1-Yo2) pO2 = (0.75)(2.8torr)/(1-0.75) =8.4 torr |
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Term
Over the physiological range of pO2 in the blood (____ torr in arterial blood and __ torr in venous blood), myoglobin is almost fully saturated with oxygen. |
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Definition
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Term
Myoglobin, is a single ___________ chain with one heme group and hence one oxygen-binding site, is useful model for tohter binding properties. |
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Definition
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Term
A hyperbolic binding curve occurs when ligands interact independently with their binding sites. true false |
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Definition
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Term
Hemoglobin is a tetramer with ____ conformations |
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Definition
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Term
two characteristics of the protein of hemoglobin: ___________ ____________ |
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Definition
-gives blood its red color -oxygen transport |
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Term
Mammalian hemoglobin, is an ______ tetramer (a dimer of _____protomer) |
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Definition
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Term
Oxygen binding alters the structure of the entire hemoglobin tetramer, so the structure of _____________ and _______________ are noticeably different. |
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Definition
deoxyhemoglobin oxygemoglobin |
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Term
In both forms of hemoglobin, the alpha and beta subunits form extensive contacts: thoses at the alpha1-beta2 (and its alpha2-beta2 symmetry equivalent) involve _____ residues, and those at the alpha1-beta2 (and alpha2-beta1) interface involve ____ residues. |
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Definition
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Term
When oxygen binds to hemoglobin, the alpha1-beta2 (and alpha2-beta1) contacts shift, producing a change in __________ structure. |
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Definition
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Term
Oxygen binds cooperatively to _______________. |
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Definition
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Term
Hemoglobin has a p50 of ________ torr (i.e., hemoglobin is half-saturated with O2 at an oxygen partial pressure of _______ torr), which is nearly ____ times greater than the p50 of myoglobin. |
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Definition
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Term
O2 binding to hemoglobin is described by a ______________ (S-shaped) ________. |
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Definition
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Term
having a sigmoidal curve (in hemoglobin), this permits the blood to deliver much more ________ to the tissues than if hemoglobin had a hyperbolic curve with the same p50. |
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Definition
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Term
When oxygen binds to hemoglobin, the alpha1-beta2 (and alpha2-beta1) contacts shift, producing a change in __________ structure. |
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Definition
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Term
Oxygenation rotates one alphabeta dimer ~15 degrees with respect to the other alphabeta dimer, which brings the beta subunits ______________ and narrows the solvent-filled central channel. |
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Definition
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Term
In any binding system, a sigmoidal curve is diagnostic of a _____________ interaction between binding sites. |
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Definition
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Term
binding of a ligand to one site affects the binding of additional ligands to the other site. true false |
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Definition
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Term
What counts for the increasing slope of the middle portion of the sigmoidal curve in the "Oxygen binding curve of Hemoglobin"? |
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Definition
An O2 molecule bound to one of hemoglobin's subunits increases the O2-binding affinity of its other subunits. |
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Term
The hill equation describes Hemoglobin's _____________ curve. |
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Definition
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Term
what is the Hill equation? |
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Definition
Yo2= (pO2)^n/(p50)^n + (pO2)^n |
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Term
What does the Hill equation describes? |
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Definition
it describes the degree of saturation of hemoglobin as a function of pO2. |
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Term
Calculate the fractional saturation of hemoglobin at pO2 = 50 torr and n=3. |
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Definition
let p50=26 torr
using Hill equation:
= (50)^3/(26)^3+(50)^3 = 125,000/17,576 + 125,000 = 0.88 |
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Term
The quantity __, the Hill constant, increases with the degree of cooperative of a reaction and therefore provides a convenient although simplistic characterization of the a ligand-binding reaction. |
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Definition
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Term
If n=1, describes a _________ as does for myglobin, and the O2-binding reaction is said to be _________________. |
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Definition
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Term
If n>1, the reaction is described as being _______________ ___________, because O2 binding increases the affinity of hemoglobin for further O2 binding. |
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Definition
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Term
If n<1, the reaction is said to be ____________ _____________, because O2 binding would then reduce the affinity of hemoglobin for subsequent O2 binding. |
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Definition
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Term
Hemoglobin's two conformations exhibit different _____________ for oxygen |
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Definition
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Term
The cooperativity of oxygen binding to hemoglobin arises from the effect of the _____________ state of one heme group on the __________ affinity of another. |
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Definition
ligand-binding ligand-binding |
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Term
Information about the O2-binding status of a heme group is mechanically transmitted to the other heme group by _______ of the proteins. |
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Definition
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Term
Oxygen binding to Hemoglobin triggers a conformational change from __ to ___. |
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Definition
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Term
In the ________ _______________, hemoglobin has two stable conformational states, the __ state (the conformation of deoxyhemoglobin) and the __ state (the conformation of oxyhemoglobin). |
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Definition
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Term
In the T state, the _____ in each of the four hemes is situated ~0.6 A out of the heme plane because of a pyramidal doming of the porphyrin group towared His F8 and because the _______ bonds are too long to allow the ___ to lie in the porphyrin plane. |
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Definition
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Term
___________ changes the heme's electronic state, which shortens the Fe--Nporphyrin bonds by 0.1~ A and causes the porphyrin doming to subcide. |
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Definition
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Term
During the T-->R transition, the Fe(II) moves into the _______ of the heme plane. |
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Definition
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Term
During the T-->R, The Fe(II) drags the covalently linked His F8 along with it. true false |
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Definition
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Term
The Fe(II) drags the linked His F8. The F helix ____ and __________ by ~1 A across the hem plane (to avoid steric clash. |
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Definition
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Term
The largest change produced by the T-->R transition is the result of movements of residues at the ____________ and __________interfaces, that is, at the interface between the two protomeric units of hemoglobin. |
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Definition
alpha1-beta2 alpha2-beata1 |
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Term
During T-->R transition in hemoglobin, an intermediate position would be severely strained because it would bring _________ and _________ too close together. |
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Definition
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Term
During T-->R transition in hemoglobin, the C-terminal residue of each subunit (Arg 141alpha and His 146beta) in T-state hemoglobin each participate in a network of intra- and intersubinit ion pairs that _________ the T state. |
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Definition
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Term
The essential feature of hemoglobin's T-->R transition is that its subunits are so tightly coupled that large ______ structural changes within one subunit cannot occur without __________ structural changes in the entire tertrameric protein. |
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Definition
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Term
Hemoglobin is limited to only two quaternary forms, T and R, because the intersubunit contacts act as a binary switch that permits only two stable positions of the subunits relative to each other true false |
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Definition
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Term
The T state of hemoglobin has low O2 affinity, mostly because of the 0.1 A greater length of its ________ bond relative to that of the R state. |
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Definition
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Term
Experimental evidence indicates that when at least one O2 has bound to each alphabeta dimer, the strain in the T-state hemoglobin molecule is sufficient to tear away the __________ ion pairs, thereby snapping the protein into the _______. |
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Definition
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Term
The Bohr Effect enhances ___________ transport. |
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Definition
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Term
In the T-state hemoglobin, the N-terminal amino group of the alpha subunits and the C-terminal His of the beta-subunits are __________ charged and participate in ion pairs. |
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Definition
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Term
The formation of ion pairs increases the _______ values (makes them less acidic and therefore less likely to give up their proton). |
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Definition
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Term
In R-state hemoglobin, these ion pairings are _______, and the pK's of the group decreases (making them more acidic and more likely to give up protons). |
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Definition
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Term
Under physiological conditions, hemoglobin releases ~.6 protons for each O2 it binds. Conversely, _________the pH, that is, removing protons, stimulates hemoglobin to bind more O2. (Bohr effect phenomenon) |
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Definition
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Term
CO2 dissolves very slowly from the tissue,reaction; CO2+H2O <--> H+ +HCO3^- However, in the erythrocyte, the enzyme ____________ _____________ greatly accelerates this reaction. |
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Definition
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Term
In the absence of carbonic anhydrase, _________ of CO2 would form in the blood. |
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Definition
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