scholarly journals Haemoglobin and Erythrocyte Potassium Types in Sheep and their Influence on Oxygen Dissociation and Haemoglobin Denaturation

1962 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 371 ◽  
Author(s):  
TJ Dawson ◽  
JV Evans

The influence of haemoglobin type and erythrocyte potassium concentration on oxygen dissociation curves and rate of denaturation of haemoglobin by alkali have been studied in Southdown sheep.

Nature ◽  
1962 ◽  
Vol 196 (4854) ◽  
pp. 550-553 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. P. SCHRUEFER ◽  
C. J. HELLER ◽  
F. C. BATTAGLIA ◽  
A. E. HELLEGERS

1960 ◽  
Vol 199 (6) ◽  
pp. 1174-1176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack N. Blechner

Sodium and potassium concentrations in the erythrocytes of adult and fetal goats were estimated by flame photometry. In the fetus there is a higher potassium and a lower sodium concentration than in the adult. The mean fetal potassium concentration is 104.8 mEq/l. of red cells and the sodium 15.8; the maternal values are 68.4 and 35.4, respectively. Pregnancy does not appear to alter the sodium and potassium concentrations in adult goat erythrocytes. Moreover, the fetal levels show no change with advancing gestation, from the 52nd to the 142nd day. The sodium and potassium gradients between the red blood cells and the plasma in fetal blood are higher than in maternal blood and suggest the possibility of an increased energy expenditure by fetal erythrocytes. The findings lend support to the hypothesis that the ionic environment within the red cell is one of the factors contributing to the differences between the oxygen dissociation curves of fetal and maternal whole blood.


The spectroscopic determination of the oxygen dissociation curves of haemoglobin has an advantage over the tonometer and gas analysis method, in that much smaller quantities of haemoglobin can be made use of. The spectroscopic method was used to determine the relationship between the foetal and maternal haemoglobins in the sheep during a study of foetal respiration made by Barcroft (1935). The conditions for the comparison of the haemoglobins were a dilute solution of the haemoglobin at p H 9·2 (borate buffer) and at 20° C. These conditions were chosen because of the very accurate determinations of the dissociation curves of dilute haemoglobin of the sheep by Forbes and Roughton (1931) and because these authors recommend p H 9·2 at room temperature as most suitable for a study of the oxygen equilibrium of haemoglobin, all the haemoglobin being in the form of the alkali salt. McCarthy (1933) and Hall (1934) had found previously that the haemoglobins of the foetal and maternal goat were different, the foetal haemoglobin (in the blood and as purified haemoglobin) having a higher affinity for oxygen. The same relationship was found to exist in the sheep haemoglobins in dilute solution at 20° C and p H 9·2. When samples of human foetal and maternal blood (sent by Professor Fleming from the Obstetrical Department of the Royal Free Hospital) were compared in dilute solution it was found that the foetal haemoglobin had a lower affinity for oxygen than the maternal. This was also found by Haurowitz (1935) for dilute solutions of the haemoglobins of mother and new born infant. Haurowitz, however, pointed out that in the corpuscles the affinity for oxygen is less in the infant’s haemoglobin than in that of the mother, but the method used by him did not allow of measurements on suspensions of corpuscles. In the present work the dissociation curves of dilute suspensions of corpuscles have been compared with similar solutions of the haemoglobin. It was found that the relationship of the dissociation curves for human foetal and maternal corpuscles is the same as that found by Barcroft in the goat and in the sheep. It has now been found that by a dilution of human adult haemoglobin the dissociation curve is altered by 200% to a position of higher affinity for oxygen, without any marked change in shape. The haemoglobin of the human foetus, on the other hand, is much less affected by dilution, thus explaining the anomaly of the reversed relationship when solutions of the haemoglobins are used instead of suspensions of corpuscles. It was shown by the work of Bock, Field, and Adair (1924), and by Adair (1925), that a solution of haemoglobin free from stromata and of a similar concentration to blood gives a dissociation curve like whole blood. This makes it clear that in the comparison of dilute haemoglobin solutions with suspensions of corpuscles we are concerned, not simply with a change in the haemoglobin due to haemolysis, but a change due to a dilution of the contents of the corpuscle.


1982 ◽  
Vol 97 (1) ◽  
pp. 253-261
Author(s):  
D. J. Macey ◽  
I. C. Potter

1. Oxygen dissociation curves of the whole blood of larvae and adults of the Southern Hemisphere lamprey Geotria australis have been determined between pH 6.8 and 8.2 at 5, 15 and 25 degrees C. 2. The P50's at temperatures of 5, 15 and 25 degrees C and a pH of 7.75 were respectively 0.57, 0.92 and 1.19 mmHg in larvae and 6.9, 10.3 and 19.0 mmHg in adults. 3. The relatively very high affinity of larval blood for oxygen may reflect an adaptation to low environmental oxygen tensions. 4. The Bohr shift was not significantly affected by either temperature or life-cycle stage. 5. The slope (n) in Hill plots increased with temperature and oxygen saturation, and was greater in adults than in larvae.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (16) ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Woyke ◽  
Mathias Ströhle ◽  
Hermann Brugger ◽  
Giacomo Strapazzon ◽  
Hannes Gatterer ◽  
...  

1976 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-38
Author(s):  
G. M. Hughes ◽  
J. G. O'Neill ◽  
W.J. van Aardt

1. A detailed account is given of an electrolytic method for determining the oxygen dissociation curve of fish blood using a single sample of 50–100 mul for the whole curve. The accuracy and some of the problems arising from its uses are discussed. 2. Oxygen dissociation curves have been determined for trout blood and human blood at temperatures of 15 and 37 degrees C. The relationship between P50 and temperature is similar to that obtained using other methods. Absolute values of P50 are generally lower than those obtained by other methods, especially in the case of fish blood. 3. The effect of PCO2 and pH on the oxygen dissociation curve of trout blood is tested and it is shown that PCO2 has a more marked effect than pH when the other factor is maintained at a constant level. The Bohr factor (delta log P50/delta pH) appears to be approximately the same and independent of the PCO2. 4.The P50 of ray blood determined from fish during and after an operation showed an increased Bohr factor.


1997 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 86-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth A. Schenkman ◽  
David R. Marble ◽  
David H. Burns ◽  
Eric O. Feigl

Schenkman, Kenneth A., David R. Marble, David H. Burns, and Eric O. Feigl. Myoglobin oxygen dissociation by multiwavelength spectroscopy. J. Appl. Physiol. 82(1): 86–92, 1997.—Multiwavelength optical spectroscopy was used to determine the oxygen-binding characteristics for equine myoglobin. Oxygen-binding relationships as a function of oxygen tension were determined for temperatures of 10, 25, 35, 37, and 40°C, at pH 7.0. In addition, dissociation curves were determined at 37°C for pH 6.5, 7.0, and 7.5. Equilibration was achieved with a myoglobin solution, at the desired temperature and pH, and 16 oxygen-nitrogen gas mixtures of known oxygen fraction. Correction for the inevitable presence of metmyoglobin was made by using a three-component least squares analysis and by correcting the end point oxymyoglobin spectra for the presence of metmyoglobin. The[Formula: see text] at which myoglobin is half-saturated with O2(P50) was determined to be 2.39 Torr at pH 7.0 and 37°C. The myoglobin dissociation curve was well fit by the Hill equation [saturation =[Formula: see text]/([Formula: see text]+ P50)].


1971 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.B. Paton ◽  
E. Peterson ◽  
D.E. Fisher ◽  
R.E. Behrman

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