Respiration: Carbon Dioxide Transport
converted into CO2 quickly through Carbonic Anhydrase enzyme
CO2 as carbonic acid in a RBC is converted into what before entering the Alveoli
small amount of CO2 movement
CO2 coming from cells & water already in the plasma accounts for how much CO2 movement out of the tissue cells
come out of the plasma and go into the Alveoli
CO2 dissolved in the plasma will do what to go to the lungs?
cell respiration
CO2 is produced as a result of what?
comes off hemoglobin
CO2 that is bound to hemoglobin does what when it wants to enter the lungs
slowly because plasma lacks Carbonic Anhydrase enzyme to convert carbonic acid into CO2 quickly
CO2 transport from plasma to Alveoli of lungs occurs how why?
cation
H+ is a what?
acid
H+ is an example of what and is a cation
HCO3- + H+
H2CO3 dissociates into what?
Carbamino-Hemoglobin
HbCO2 is what molecule?
Cl-
is neither an acid or base so has no effect on pH
HbCO2
molecule that has at least 1 molecule of CO2 bound to hemoglobin
CO2 dissolved in plasma (7-10%)
only accounts for 1/10th of all CO2 transport in the blood
O2 comes off Hemoglobin at same time and goes to cells of tissues
as CO2 binds to Hemoglobin what happens to O2?
form more H2CO3 from CO2 & H2o reformation and plasma pH continues to go down
as deoxygenated blood goes up from the tissues and back to the lungs what occurs
lower pH
as more CO2 enters the plasma what happens to pH?
O2 is leaving Alveoli and entering RBC
at the same time CO2 is going into Alveoli what is occuring
HCO3-
at the same time Cl- is leaving the RBC when CO2 goes back to the Alveoli what comes into the RBC
base
bicarbonate (HCO3) is an anion produced and is what?
HCO3-
bicarbonate Ion
go one way across a membrane
bicarbonate can only travel how?
produces bicarbonate base
how does the body try to neutralize the addition of acids into the plasma
H+
hydrogen ion that is an acid because it lowers pH
dissociate carbonic acid quickly into H+ & HCO3-
if Carbonic Acid forms quickly what does this mean?
anions
if a cell loses anions it wants to gain what to stay electrically neutral
HCO3- and H+ formation
if the carbonic acid formation occurs slowly in the plasma due to the lack of an enzyme what else occurs slowly
slowly
the conversion of CO2 into Bicarbonate Ion occurs how in the plasma
plasma & RBC
the conversion of CO2 into Bicarbonate Ion occurs where?
fast; due to enzymes
the conversion of CO2 into bicarbonate ion occurs how in the RBC why?
CO2 in the RBC as Carbonic Acid
the most abundant amount of CO2 entering the Alveoli is from where?
carbon dioxide
the most important gas in the blood
CO2 as Bicarbonate Ion (60-70%)
the way in which the most CO2 is transported in blood
converted into CO2 + H2O and enters Alveoli
to go back to the lungs what happens to CO2 in the plasma as carbonic acid
dissolved in plasma bound to hemoglobin CO2 as Bicarbonate Ion
what are the 3 ways carbon dioxide transport can occur
Cl-
what can be introduced into the cytoplasm to maintain RBC charge?
tries neutralizing the acid
what does the body do in response to plasma pH decreasing due to the addition of an Acid?
HbCO2 --> Hb + CO2
what equation represents CO2 coming off of Hemoglobin to go back into the Alveoli
H+ + HCO3 --> H2CO3 --> H2O + CO2
what equation represents CO2 transport into the ALVEOLI
HbO2 --> O2 + Hb
what equation represents O2 coming off Hemoglobin and entering the cells of tissues
H+ ion
what is removed from hemoglobin when CO2 goes back into the lungs
H2O + CO2 --> H2CO3 --> HCO3- + H+
what is the equation representing CO2 conversion into bicarbonate ion?
dissolved in the plasma
what is the least abundant way O2 leaves the Alveoli
when O2 & HHb dissociate where O2 is on Hemoglobin & H+ ion
what is the most abundant way O2 leaves the Alveoli and enters the RBC
pH of plasma becomes more acidic and goes down ad more carbonic acid goes into plasma SLOWLY
what is the result of carbonic acid formation
hemoglobin
what neutralizes H+ in a RBC acting as a buffer to not effect pH
90%
what percentage of plasma is made up of water
slowly
when CO2 and H2O get closer together and reform into Carbonic Acid how does this occur in the plasma?
Carbonic Acid (H2CO3)
when CO2 and H2O get closer together they reform into what?
CO2 + Hb --> HbCO2
when CO2 comes out of the tissues and attaches to hemoglobin in a RBC what equation does it form?
quickly
when CO2 is converted into bicarbonate ion in the RBC how does this occur
Cl- shift occurs so it leaves the RBC
when CO2 is going back into the Alveoli what occurs to keep RBC neutral?
Cl-
when transporting bicarbonate out of the RBC it has to replaced with what to stay electrically neutral inside the cell
because H+ binds to hemoglobin and is buffered by hemoglobin forming HHb
why does pH inside the RBC never change
RBC has Carbonic Anhydrase enzyme
why does the formation of the bicarbonate ion from CO2 in the RBC occur quickly?
chemical reactions lacking catalyst, enzyme
why does the reformation of CO2 and H2O into Carbonic Acid IN THE PLASMA occur slowly?
Carbonic Acid forms quickly
within 1-2 seconds of CO2 entering a RBC from the tissue cells what occurs?
carbonic anhydrase
enzyme bringing H2O & CO2 together faster in a RBC to form H2CO3-
bound to hemoglobin (20-30%)
1/4 of all CO2 transport in blood is down through this?
H2CO3-
carbonic acid
no
does the pH inside the RBC ever change
Bicarbonate
goes across the RBC membrane and enters the plasma to neutralize the carbonic acid build up caused by an increase in CO2
HBCO2
represents carbamino-hemoglobin
hemoglobin
some CO2 comes out of the tissues and attaches to what in the RBC?
enzyme
speeds up biochemical reactions