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Bohr effect

The Bohr effect is a phenomenon first described in 1904 by the Danish physiologist Christian Bohr. Hemoglobin's oxygen binding affinity (see oxygen–haemoglobin dissociation curve) is inversely related both to acidity and to the concentration of carbon dioxide.[1] That is, the Bohr effect refers to the shift in the oxygen dissociation curve caused by changes in the concentration of carbon dioxide or the pH of the environment. Since carbon dioxide reacts with water to form carbonic acid, an increase in CO2 results in a decrease in blood pH,[2] resulting in hemoglobin proteins releasing their load of oxygen. Conversely, a decrease in carbon dioxide provokes an increase in pH, which results in hemoglobin picking up more oxygen.

Christian Bohr, who was credited with the discovery of the effect in 1904.

Experimental discovery edit

 
The original dissociation curves from Bohr's experiments in the first description of the Bohr effect, showing a decrease in oxygen affinity as the partial pressure of carbon dioxide increases. This is also one of the first examples of cooperative binding. X-axis: oxygen partial pressure in mmHg, Y-axis % oxy-hemoglobin. The curves were obtained using whole dog blood, with the exception of the dashed curve, for which horse blood was used.

In the early 1900s, Christian Bohr was a professor at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, already well known for his work in the field of respiratory physiology.[3] He had spent the last two decades studying the solubility of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and other gases in various liquids,[4] and had conducted extensive research on haemoglobin and its affinity for oxygen.[3] In 1903, he began working closely with Karl Hasselbalch and August Krogh, two of his associates at the university, in an attempt to experimentally replicate the work of Gustav von Hüfner, using whole blood instead of haemoglobin solution.[1] Hüfner had suggested that the oxygen-haemoglobin binding curve was hyperbolic in shape,[5] but after extensive experimentation, the Copenhagen group determined that the curve was in fact sigmoidal. Furthermore, in the process of plotting out numerous dissociation curves, it soon became apparent that high partial pressures of carbon dioxide caused the curves to shift to the right.[4] Further experimentation while varying the CO2 concentration quickly provided conclusive evidence, confirming the existence of what would soon become known as the Bohr effect.[1]

Controversy edit

There is some more debate over whether Bohr was actually the first to discover the relationship between CO2 and oxygen affinity, or whether the Russian physiologist Bronislav Verigo [ru] beat him to it, allegedly discovering the effect in 1898, six years before Bohr.[6] While this has never been proven, Verigo did in fact publish a paper on the haemoglobin-CO2 relationship in 1892.[7] His proposed model was flawed, and Bohr harshly criticized it in his own publications.[1]

Another challenge to Bohr's discovery comes from within his lab. Though Bohr was quick to take full credit, his associate Krogh, who invented the apparatus used to measure gas concentrations in the experiments,[8] maintained throughout his life that he himself had actually been the first to demonstrate the effect. Though there is some evidence to support this, retroactively changing the name of a well-known phenomenon would be extremely impractical, so it remains known as the Bohr effect.[4]

Physiological role edit

The Bohr effect increases the efficiency of oxygen transportation through the blood. After hemoglobin binds to oxygen in the lungs due to the high oxygen concentrations, the Bohr effect facilitates its release in the tissues, particularly those tissues in most need of oxygen. When a tissue's metabolic rate increases, so does its carbon dioxide waste production. When released into the bloodstream, carbon dioxide forms bicarbonate and protons through the following reaction:

 

Although this reaction usually proceeds very slowly, the enzyme carbonic anhydrase (which is present in red blood cells) drastically speeds up the conversion to bicarbonate and protons.[2] This causes the pH of the blood to decrease, which promotes the dissociation of oxygen from haemoglobin, and allows the surrounding tissues to obtain enough oxygen to meet their demands. In areas where oxygen concentration is high, such as the lungs, binding of oxygen causes haemoglobin to release protons, which recombine with bicarbonate to eliminate carbon dioxide during exhalation. These opposing protonation and deprotonation reactions occur in equilibrium resulting in little overall change in blood pH.

The Bohr effect enables the body to adapt to changing conditions and makes it possible to supply extra oxygen to tissues that need it the most. For example, when muscles are undergoing strenuous activity, they require large amounts of oxygen to conduct cellular respiration, which generates CO2 (and therefore HCO3 and H+) as byproducts. These waste products lower the pH of the blood, which increases oxygen delivery to the active muscles. Carbon dioxide is not the only molecule that can trigger the Bohr effect. If muscle cells aren't receiving enough oxygen for cellular respiration, they resort to lactic acid fermentation, which releases lactic acid as a byproduct. This increases the acidity of the blood far more than CO2 alone, which reflects the cells' even greater need for oxygen. In fact, under anaerobic conditions, muscles generate lactic acid so quickly that pH of the blood passing through the muscles will drop to around 7.2, which causes haemoglobin to begin releasing roughly 10% more oxygen.[2]

 
The magnitude of the Bohr effect is given by  , which is the slope on this graph. A steeper slope means a stronger Bohr effect.

Strength of the effect and body size edit

The magnitude of the Bohr effect is usually given by the slope of the   vs   curve where, P50 refers to the partial pressure of oxygen when 50% of haemoglobin's binding sites are occupied. The slope is denoted:   where   denotes change. That is,   denotes the change in   and   the change in  . Bohr effect strength exhibits an inverse relationship with the size of an organism: the magnitude increases as size and weight decreases. For example, mice possess a very strong Bohr effect, with a   value of -0.96, which requires relatively minor changes in H+ or CO2 concentrations, while elephants require much larger changes in concentration to achieve a much weaker effect  .[9]


Mechanism edit

Allosteric interactions edit

 
Haemoglobin changes conformation from a high-affinity R state (oxygenated) to a low-affinity T state (deoxygenated) to improve oxygen uptake and delivery.

The Bohr effect hinges around allosteric interactions between the hemes of the haemoglobin tetramer, a mechanism first proposed by Max Perutz in 1970.[10] Haemoglobin exists in two conformations: a high-affinity R state and a low-affinity T state. When oxygen concentration levels are high, as in the lungs, the R state is favored, enabling the maximum amount of oxygen to be bound to the hemes. In the capillaries, where oxygen concentration levels are lower, the T state is favored, in order to facilitate the delivery of oxygen to the tissues. The Bohr effect is dependent on this allostery, as increases in CO2 and H+ help stabilize the T state and ensure greater oxygen delivery to muscles during periods of elevated cellular respiration. This is evidenced by the fact that myoglobin, a monomer with no allostery, does not exhibit the Bohr effect.[2] Haemoglobin mutants with weaker allostery may exhibit a reduced Bohr effect. For example, in Hiroshima variant haemoglobinopathy, allostery in haemoglobin is reduced, and the Bohr effect is diminished. As a result, during periods of exercise, the mutant haemoglobin has a higher affinity for oxygen and tissue may suffer minor oxygen starvation.[11]

T-state stabilization edit

When hemoglobin is in its T state, the N-terminal amino groups of the α-subunits and the C-terminal histidine of the β-subunits are protonated, giving them a positive charge and allowing these residues to participate in ionic interactions with carboxyl groups on nearby residues. These interactions help hold the haemoglobin in the T state. Decreases in pH (increases in acidity) stabilize this state even more, since a decrease in pH makes these residues even more likely to be protonated, strengthening the ionic interactions. In the R state, the ionic pairings are absent, meaning that the R state's stability increases when the pH increases, as these residues are less likely to stay protonated in a more basic environment. The Bohr effect works by simultaneously destabilizing the high-affinity R state and stabilizing the low-affinity T state, which leads to an overall decrease in oxygen affinity.[2] This can be visualized on an oxygen-haemoglobin dissociation curve by shifting the whole curve to the right.

Carbon dioxide can also react directly with the N-terminal amino groups to form carbamates, according to the following reaction:

 

CO2 forms carbamates more frequently with the T state, which helps to stabilize this conformation. The process also creates protons, meaning that the formation of carbamates also contributes to the strengthening of ionic interactions, further stabilizing the T state.[2]

Special cases edit

 
Though they are one of the largest animals on the planet, humpback whales have a Bohr effect magnitude similar to that of a guinea pig.

Marine mammals edit

An exception to the otherwise well-supported link between animal body size and the sensitivity of its haemoglobin to changes in pH was discovered in 1961.[12] Based on their size and weight, many marine mammals were hypothesized to have a very low, almost negligible Bohr effect.[9] However, when their blood was examined, this was not the case. Humpback whales weighing 41,000 kilograms had an observed   value of 0.82, which is roughly equivalent to the Bohr effect magnitude in a 0.57 kg guinea pig.[9] This extremely strong Bohr effect is hypothesized to be one of marine mammals' many adaptations for deep, long dives, as it allows for virtually all of the bound oxygen on haemoglobin to dissociate and supply the whale's body while it is underwater.[12] Examination of other marine mammal species supports this. In pilot whales and porpoises, which are primarily surface feeders and seldom dive for more than a few minutes, the  was 0.52, comparable to a cow,[9] which is much closer to the expected Bohr effect magnitude for animals of their size.[12]

Carbon monoxide edit

Another special case of the Bohr effect occurs when carbon monoxide is present. This molecule serves as a competitive inhibitor for oxygen, and binds to haemoglobin to form carboxyhaemoglobin.[13] Haemoglobin's affinity for CO is about 210 times stronger than its affinity for O2,[14] meaning that it is very unlikely to dissociate, and once bound, it blocks the binding of O2 to that subunit. At the same time, CO is structurally similar enough to O2 to cause carboxyhemoglobin to favor the R state, raising the oxygen affinity of the remaining unoccupied subunits. This combination significantly reduces the delivery of oxygen to the tissues of the body, which is what makes carbon monoxide so toxic. This toxicity is reduced slightly by an increase in the strength of the Bohr effect in the presence of carboxyhemoglobin. This increase is ultimately due to differences in interactions between heme groups in carboxyhemoglobin relative to oxygenated hemoglobin. It is most pronounced when the oxygen concentration is extremely low, as a last-ditch effort when the need for oxygen delivery becomes critical. However, the physiological implications of this phenomenon remain unclear.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Bohr; Hasselbalch, Krogh. "Concerning a Biologically Important Relationship - The Influence of the Carbon Dioxide Content of Blood on its Oxygen Binding". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f Voet, Donald; Judith G. Voet; Charlotte W. Pratt (2013). Fundamentals of Biochemistry: Life at the Molecular Level (4th ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 189.
  3. ^ a b Irzhak, L. I. (2005). "Christian Bohr (On the Occasion of the 150th Anniversary of His Birth)". Human Physiology. 31 (3): 366–368. doi:10.1007/s10747-005-0060-x. ISSN 0362-1197.
  4. ^ a b c Edsall, J. T. (1972). "Blood and Hemoglobin: The Evolution of Knowledge of Functional Adaptation in a Biochemical System. Part I: The Adaptation of Chemical Structure to Function in Hemoglobin". Journal of the History of Biology. 5 (2): 205–257. doi:10.1007/bf00346659. JSTOR 4330576. PMID 11610121. S2CID 751105.
  5. ^ G. Hüfner, "Ueber das Gesetz der Dissociation des Oxyharmoglobins und über einige daran sich knupfenden wichtigen Fragen aus der Biologie," [On the Law of the Dissociation of Oxyharmoglobin, and on some important questions arising from biology]. Arch. Anat. Physiol. (in German) (Physiol. Abtheilung) (1890), 1-27.
  6. ^ "Вериго эффект - это... Что такое Вериго эффект?" [Verigo effect is... What is the Verigo effect?]. Словари и энциклопедии на Академике (in Russian). Retrieved 2016-11-08.
  7. ^ B. Werigo, "Zur Frage uber die Wirkung des Sauerstoffs auf die Kohlensaureausscheidung in den Lungen," [The question about the effect of oxygen on the secretion of carbonic acid in the lungs]. Pflügers Arch. ges. Physiol. (in German), 51 (1892), 321-361.
  8. ^ A. Krogh, "Apparat und Methoden zur Bestimmung der Aufnahme von Gasen im Blute bei verschiedenen Spannungen der Gase," [Apparatus and methods for the determination of the absorption of gases in the blood at different tensions of the gases]. Skand. Arch. Physiol. (in German), 16 (1904), 390-401.
  9. ^ a b c d Riggs, Austen (1960-03-01). "The Nature and Significance of the Bohr Effect in Mammalian Hemoglobins". The Journal of General Physiology. 43 (4): 737–752. doi:10.1085/jgp.43.4.737. ISSN 0022-1295. PMC 2195025. PMID 19873527.
  10. ^ Perutz, Max (1998-01-15). Science is Not a Quiet Life. World Scientific. ISBN 9789814498517.
  11. ^ Olson, JS; Gibson QH; Nagel RL; Hamilton HB (December 1972). "The ligand-binding properties of hemoglobin Hiroshima ( 2 2 146asp )". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 247 (23): 7485–93. doi:10.1016/S0021-9258(19)44551-1. PMID 4636319.
  12. ^ a b c Riggs, Austen (1961-04-01). "Bohr Effect in the Hæmoglobins of Marine Mammals". Nature. 190 (4770): 94–95. Bibcode:1961Natur.190...94R. doi:10.1038/190094a0. PMID 13741621. S2CID 26899569.
  13. ^ a b Hlastala, M. P.; McKenna, H. P.; Franada, R. L.; Detter, J. C. (1976-12-01). "Influence of carbon monoxide on hemoglobin-oxygen binding". Journal of Applied Physiology. 41 (6): 893–899. doi:10.1152/jappl.1976.41.6.893. ISSN 0021-8987. PMID 12132.
  14. ^ Hall, John E. (2010). Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology (12th ed.). Philadelphia, Pa: Saunders/Elsevier. p. 502. ISBN 978-1416045748.

External links edit

  • Impact of training

bohr, effect, confused, with, bohr, equation, phenomenon, first, described, 1904, danish, physiologist, christian, bohr, hemoglobin, oxygen, binding, affinity, oxygen, haemoglobin, dissociation, curve, inversely, related, both, acidity, concentration, carbon, . Not to be confused with the Bohr equation The Bohr effect is a phenomenon first described in 1904 by the Danish physiologist Christian Bohr Hemoglobin s oxygen binding affinity see oxygen haemoglobin dissociation curve is inversely related both to acidity and to the concentration of carbon dioxide 1 That is the Bohr effect refers to the shift in the oxygen dissociation curve caused by changes in the concentration of carbon dioxide or the pH of the environment Since carbon dioxide reacts with water to form carbonic acid an increase in CO2 results in a decrease in blood pH 2 resulting in hemoglobin proteins releasing their load of oxygen Conversely a decrease in carbon dioxide provokes an increase in pH which results in hemoglobin picking up more oxygen Christian Bohr who was credited with the discovery of the effect in 1904 Contents 1 Experimental discovery 1 1 Controversy 2 Physiological role 2 1 Strength of the effect and body size 3 Mechanism 3 1 Allosteric interactions 3 2 T state stabilization 4 Special cases 4 1 Marine mammals 4 2 Carbon monoxide 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksExperimental discovery edit nbsp The original dissociation curves from Bohr s experiments in the first description of the Bohr effect showing a decrease in oxygen affinity as the partial pressure of carbon dioxide increases This is also one of the first examples of cooperative binding X axis oxygen partial pressure in mmHg Y axis oxy hemoglobin The curves were obtained using whole dog blood with the exception of the dashed curve for which horse blood was used In the early 1900s Christian Bohr was a professor at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark already well known for his work in the field of respiratory physiology 3 He had spent the last two decades studying the solubility of oxygen carbon dioxide and other gases in various liquids 4 and had conducted extensive research on haemoglobin and its affinity for oxygen 3 In 1903 he began working closely with Karl Hasselbalch and August Krogh two of his associates at the university in an attempt to experimentally replicate the work of Gustav von Hufner using whole blood instead of haemoglobin solution 1 Hufner had suggested that the oxygen haemoglobin binding curve was hyperbolic in shape 5 but after extensive experimentation the Copenhagen group determined that the curve was in fact sigmoidal Furthermore in the process of plotting out numerous dissociation curves it soon became apparent that high partial pressures of carbon dioxide caused the curves to shift to the right 4 Further experimentation while varying the CO2 concentration quickly provided conclusive evidence confirming the existence of what would soon become known as the Bohr effect 1 Controversy edit There is some more debate over whether Bohr was actually the first to discover the relationship between CO2 and oxygen affinity or whether the Russian physiologist Bronislav Verigo ru beat him to it allegedly discovering the effect in 1898 six years before Bohr 6 While this has never been proven Verigo did in fact publish a paper on the haemoglobin CO2 relationship in 1892 7 His proposed model was flawed and Bohr harshly criticized it in his own publications 1 Another challenge to Bohr s discovery comes from within his lab Though Bohr was quick to take full credit his associate Krogh who invented the apparatus used to measure gas concentrations in the experiments 8 maintained throughout his life that he himself had actually been the first to demonstrate the effect Though there is some evidence to support this retroactively changing the name of a well known phenomenon would be extremely impractical so it remains known as the Bohr effect 4 Physiological role editThe Bohr effect increases the efficiency of oxygen transportation through the blood After hemoglobin binds to oxygen in the lungs due to the high oxygen concentrations the Bohr effect facilitates its release in the tissues particularly those tissues in most need of oxygen When a tissue s metabolic rate increases so does its carbon dioxide waste production When released into the bloodstream carbon dioxide forms bicarbonate and protons through the following reaction CO 2 H 2 O H 2 CO 3 H HCO 3 displaystyle ce CO2 H2O lt gt H2CO3 lt gt H HCO3 nbsp Although this reaction usually proceeds very slowly the enzyme carbonic anhydrase which is present in red blood cells drastically speeds up the conversion to bicarbonate and protons 2 This causes the pH of the blood to decrease which promotes the dissociation of oxygen from haemoglobin and allows the surrounding tissues to obtain enough oxygen to meet their demands In areas where oxygen concentration is high such as the lungs binding of oxygen causes haemoglobin to release protons which recombine with bicarbonate to eliminate carbon dioxide during exhalation These opposing protonation and deprotonation reactions occur in equilibrium resulting in little overall change in blood pH The Bohr effect enables the body to adapt to changing conditions and makes it possible to supply extra oxygen to tissues that need it the most For example when muscles are undergoing strenuous activity they require large amounts of oxygen to conduct cellular respiration which generates CO2 and therefore HCO3 and H as byproducts These waste products lower the pH of the blood which increases oxygen delivery to the active muscles Carbon dioxide is not the only molecule that can trigger the Bohr effect If muscle cells aren t receiving enough oxygen for cellular respiration they resort to lactic acid fermentation which releases lactic acid as a byproduct This increases the acidity of the blood far more than CO2 alone which reflects the cells even greater need for oxygen In fact under anaerobic conditions muscles generate lactic acid so quickly that pH of the blood passing through the muscles will drop to around 7 2 which causes haemoglobin to begin releasing roughly 10 more oxygen 2 nbsp The magnitude of the Bohr effect is given by D log P 50 D pH textstyle scriptstyle Delta log P 50 over Delta text pH nbsp which is the slope on this graph A steeper slope means a stronger Bohr effect Strength of the effect and body size edit The magnitude of the Bohr effect is usually given by the slope of the log P 50 textstyle log P 50 nbsp vs pH textstyle text pH nbsp curve where P50 refers to the partial pressure of oxygen when 50 of haemoglobin s binding sites are occupied The slope is denoted D log P 50 D pH textstyle scriptstyle Delta log P 50 over Delta text pH nbsp where D textstyle Delta nbsp denotes change That is D log P 50 textstyle Delta log P 50 nbsp denotes the change in log P 50 textstyle log P 50 nbsp and D pH textstyle Delta text pH nbsp the change in pH textstyle text pH nbsp Bohr effect strength exhibits an inverse relationship with the size of an organism the magnitude increases as size and weight decreases For example mice possess a very strong Bohr effect with a D log P 50 D pH textstyle scriptstyle Delta log P 50 over Delta text pH nbsp value of 0 96 which requires relatively minor changes in H or CO2 concentrations while elephants require much larger changes in concentration to achieve a much weaker effect D log P 50 D pH 0 38 textstyle left scriptstyle Delta log P 50 over Delta text pH 0 38 right nbsp 9 Mechanism editAllosteric interactions edit nbsp Haemoglobin changes conformation from a high affinity R state oxygenated to a low affinity T state deoxygenated to improve oxygen uptake and delivery The Bohr effect hinges around allosteric interactions between the hemes of the haemoglobin tetramer a mechanism first proposed by Max Perutz in 1970 10 Haemoglobin exists in two conformations a high affinity R state and a low affinity T state When oxygen concentration levels are high as in the lungs the R state is favored enabling the maximum amount of oxygen to be bound to the hemes In the capillaries where oxygen concentration levels are lower the T state is favored in order to facilitate the delivery of oxygen to the tissues The Bohr effect is dependent on this allostery as increases in CO2 and H help stabilize the T state and ensure greater oxygen delivery to muscles during periods of elevated cellular respiration This is evidenced by the fact that myoglobin a monomer with no allostery does not exhibit the Bohr effect 2 Haemoglobin mutants with weaker allostery may exhibit a reduced Bohr effect For example in Hiroshima variant haemoglobinopathy allostery in haemoglobin is reduced and the Bohr effect is diminished As a result during periods of exercise the mutant haemoglobin has a higher affinity for oxygen and tissue may suffer minor oxygen starvation 11 T state stabilization edit When hemoglobin is in its T state the N terminal amino groups of the a subunits and the C terminal histidine of the b subunits are protonated giving them a positive charge and allowing these residues to participate in ionic interactions with carboxyl groups on nearby residues These interactions help hold the haemoglobin in the T state Decreases in pH increases in acidity stabilize this state even more since a decrease in pH makes these residues even more likely to be protonated strengthening the ionic interactions In the R state the ionic pairings are absent meaning that the R state s stability increases when the pH increases as these residues are less likely to stay protonated in a more basic environment The Bohr effect works by simultaneously destabilizing the high affinity R state and stabilizing the low affinity T state which leads to an overall decrease in oxygen affinity 2 This can be visualized on an oxygen haemoglobin dissociation curve by shifting the whole curve to the right Carbon dioxide can also react directly with the N terminal amino groups to form carbamates according to the following reaction R NH 2 CO 2 R NH COO H displaystyle ce R NH2 CO2 lt gt R NH COO H nbsp CO2 forms carbamates more frequently with the T state which helps to stabilize this conformation The process also creates protons meaning that the formation of carbamates also contributes to the strengthening of ionic interactions further stabilizing the T state 2 Special cases edit nbsp Though they are one of the largest animals on the planet humpback whales have a Bohr effect magnitude similar to that of a guinea pig Marine mammals edit An exception to the otherwise well supported link between animal body size and the sensitivity of its haemoglobin to changes in pH was discovered in 1961 12 Based on their size and weight many marine mammals were hypothesized to have a very low almost negligible Bohr effect 9 However when their blood was examined this was not the case Humpback whales weighing 41 000 kilograms had an observed D log P 50 D pH textstyle scriptstyle Delta log P 50 over Delta text pH nbsp value of 0 82 which is roughly equivalent to the Bohr effect magnitude in a 0 57 kg guinea pig 9 This extremely strong Bohr effect is hypothesized to be one of marine mammals many adaptations for deep long dives as it allows for virtually all of the bound oxygen on haemoglobin to dissociate and supply the whale s body while it is underwater 12 Examination of other marine mammal species supports this In pilot whales and porpoises which are primarily surface feeders and seldom dive for more than a few minutes the D log P 50 D pH textstyle scriptstyle Delta log P 50 over Delta text pH nbsp was 0 52 comparable to a cow 9 which is much closer to the expected Bohr effect magnitude for animals of their size 12 Carbon monoxide edit Another special case of the Bohr effect occurs when carbon monoxide is present This molecule serves as a competitive inhibitor for oxygen and binds to haemoglobin to form carboxyhaemoglobin 13 Haemoglobin s affinity for CO is about 210 times stronger than its affinity for O2 14 meaning that it is very unlikely to dissociate and once bound it blocks the binding of O2 to that subunit At the same time CO is structurally similar enough to O2 to cause carboxyhemoglobin to favor the R state raising the oxygen affinity of the remaining unoccupied subunits This combination significantly reduces the delivery of oxygen to the tissues of the body which is what makes carbon monoxide so toxic This toxicity is reduced slightly by an increase in the strength of the Bohr effect in the presence of carboxyhemoglobin This increase is ultimately due to differences in interactions between heme groups in carboxyhemoglobin relative to oxygenated hemoglobin It is most pronounced when the oxygen concentration is extremely low as a last ditch effort when the need for oxygen delivery becomes critical However the physiological implications of this phenomenon remain unclear 13 See also editAllosteric regulation Haldane effect Root effect Chloride shiftReferences edit a b c d Bohr Hasselbalch Krogh Concerning a Biologically Important Relationship The Influence of the Carbon Dioxide Content of Blood on its Oxygen Binding a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e f Voet Donald Judith G Voet Charlotte W Pratt 2013 Fundamentals of Biochemistry Life at the Molecular Level 4th ed John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 189 a b Irzhak L I 2005 Christian Bohr On the Occasion of the 150th Anniversary of His Birth Human Physiology 31 3 366 368 doi 10 1007 s10747 005 0060 x ISSN 0362 1197 a b c Edsall J T 1972 Blood and Hemoglobin The Evolution of Knowledge of Functional Adaptation in a Biochemical System Part I The Adaptation of Chemical Structure to Function in Hemoglobin Journal of the History of Biology 5 2 205 257 doi 10 1007 bf00346659 JSTOR 4330576 PMID 11610121 S2CID 751105 G Hufner Ueber das Gesetz der Dissociation des Oxyharmoglobins und uber einige daran sich knupfenden wichtigen Fragen aus der Biologie On the Law of the Dissociation of Oxyharmoglobin and on some important questions arising from biology Arch Anat Physiol in German Physiol Abtheilung 1890 1 27 Verigo effekt eto Chto takoe Verigo effekt Verigo effect is What is the Verigo effect Slovari i enciklopedii na Akademike in Russian Retrieved 2016 11 08 B Werigo Zur Frage uber die Wirkung des Sauerstoffs auf die Kohlensaureausscheidung in den Lungen The question about the effect of oxygen on the secretion of carbonic acid in the lungs Pflugers Arch ges Physiol in German 51 1892 321 361 A Krogh Apparat und Methoden zur Bestimmung der Aufnahme von Gasen im Blute bei verschiedenen Spannungen der Gase Apparatus and methods for the determination of the absorption of gases in the blood at different tensions of the gases Skand Arch Physiol in German 16 1904 390 401 a b c d Riggs Austen 1960 03 01 The Nature and Significance of the Bohr Effect in Mammalian Hemoglobins The Journal of General Physiology 43 4 737 752 doi 10 1085 jgp 43 4 737 ISSN 0022 1295 PMC 2195025 PMID 19873527 Perutz Max 1998 01 15 Science is Not a Quiet Life World Scientific ISBN 9789814498517 Olson JS Gibson QH Nagel RL Hamilton HB December 1972 The ligand binding properties of hemoglobin Hiroshima 2 2 146asp The Journal of Biological Chemistry 247 23 7485 93 doi 10 1016 S0021 9258 19 44551 1 PMID 4636319 a b c Riggs Austen 1961 04 01 Bohr Effect in the Haemoglobins of Marine Mammals Nature 190 4770 94 95 Bibcode 1961Natur 190 94R doi 10 1038 190094a0 PMID 13741621 S2CID 26899569 a b Hlastala M P McKenna H P Franada R L Detter J C 1976 12 01 Influence of carbon monoxide on hemoglobin oxygen binding Journal of Applied Physiology 41 6 893 899 doi 10 1152 jappl 1976 41 6 893 ISSN 0021 8987 PMID 12132 Hall John E 2010 Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology 12th ed Philadelphia Pa Saunders Elsevier p 502 ISBN 978 1416045748 External links editImpact of training Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bohr effect amp oldid 1146853933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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