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Hemoglobin

Hemoglobin, iron-protein compound in red blood cells that gives blood its red co
lor and transports oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nitric oxide. Hemoglobin is prese
nt in all but the least complex of animals. It carries oxygen from the lungs or
gills, where blood is oxygenated, to body cells. When saturated with oxygen, hem
oglobin is called oxyhemoglobin. After releasing oxygen to the body tissues, hem
oglobin reverses its function and picks up carbon dioxide, the waste product of
cellular respiration, for transport to the lungs, where it is expired. When satu
rated with carbon dioxide, hemoglobin is known as carboxyhemoglobin.
In 1996 scientists discovered that, in addition to oxygen and carbon dioxide, he
moglobin takes up and releases a third gas, nitric oxide. Nitric oxide plays an
important role in regulating blood pressure by relaxing the blood vessel walls,
thus increasing blood flow. Hemoglobin controls the expansion and contraction of
blood vessels, and thus blood pressure, by regulating the amount of nitric oxid
e to which the vessels are exposed.
Hemoglobin is contained entirely in the red blood cells, amounting to perhaps 35
percent of their weight. To combine properly with oxygen, red blood cells must
contain adequate hemoglobin. Hemoglobin, in turn, is dependent on iron for its f
ormation. A deficiency of hemoglobin caused by a lack of iron in the body leads
to anemia.
Hemoglobin carries more than 20 times its volume of oxygen. Some chemicals, such
as carbon monoxide, combine so firmly with hemoglobin that it can no longer com
bine with oxygen and asphyxiation results.
After a life of perhaps 120 days, red blood cells are destroyed in the spleen, o
r in the course of circulation, their hemoglobin is broken into its constituents
, including iron, which enters new blood cells formed in the bone marrow.
When blood vessels rupture, as in an injury, the red cells are released and esca
pe into tissue, where they are broken down. The hemoglobin is converted into bil
e pigments, the color of which is responsible for the appearance of bruises.
Alterations in the structure of hemoglobin can lead to life-threatening illnesse
s. The most important of these conditions is sickle-cell anemia, which involves
a hereditary change in one of the amino acids that make up hemoglobin. The thala
ssemias are a group of hereditary diseases of similar origin.
Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2005. 1993-2004 Microsoft Corporation. All rights
reserved.

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