Abstract

Hemoglobin-oxygen-binding characteristics and essential influencing factors were investigated in human erythrocytes of different age separated by density gradient centrifugation. The most important age-dependent changes of the cell milieu are losses of K +, organic phosphates and water; the latter also leads to an increased concentration of negative charges on Hb. This augments the Donnan effect, which is only partly compensated for by a decrease of DPG. The oxygen dissociation curve of the oldest fraction (P 50 23.4 mm Hg) is shifted to the left compared to young cells (P 50 29.2 mm Hg), and Hills 'n' is decreased (old cells 2.31, young cells 2.74). The Bohr effect for CO 2 increases in the old population (BC CO 2 at 50% S O 20.63 and 0.24 for old and young erythrocytes, respectively). This effect is less pronounced for the Bohr coefficients for lactic acid (ΔBC Lac 0.09). Most cell age-dependent alterations of Hb-O 2-binding (including BC CO 2) are explainable by opposite alterations of [Hb] and [DPG], causing the change of the ratio [DPG]/[Hb] from 1.3 to 0.7 during the aging process of the erythrocytes. Minor effects may result from aging of the Hb-molecule itself.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call