In a real hemoglobin molecule, the tendency of oxygen to bind to a heme site increases as the other three heme sites become occupied. To model this effect in a simple way, imagine that a hemoglobin molecule has just two sites, either or both of which can be occupied. This system has four possible states (with only oxygen present). Take the energy of the unoccupied state to be zero, the energies of the two singly occupied states to be -0.55eV, and the energy of the doubly occupied state to be -1.3eV(so the change in energy upon binding the second oxygen is -0.75eV). As in the previous problem, calculate and plot the fraction of occupied sites as a function of the effective partial pressure of oxygen. Compare to the graph from the previous problem (for independent sites). Can you think of why this behavior is preferable for the function of hemoglobin?

Short Answer

Expert verified

Occupancy rises gradually for smaller values of P. This shows that with cooperative binding, hemoglobin reacts with oxygen much fast in cells when P is small.

Step by step solution

01

Step 1. Formula Gibb's Factor

Gibb's Factor is given by formula:

Gibb'sFactor=e-(ε-nμ)kT

where, kis Boltzmann's constant, Tis temperature, μis chemical potential, and εis energy of state .

As, in hemoglobin molecule, oxygen can have four different states given by:

localid="1647144603783" εo=0eVε1=-0.55eV(twosinglyoccupied)ε2=-1.3eV

The average number of oxygen molecules is given by,

N=SN(S)=2e-(ε1-μ)kTZ+2e-(ε2-2μ)kTZ

02

Step 2. Formula occupancy

Occupancy of system is given by:

n=NZ=1Ze-(ε1-μ)kT+-(ε2-2μ)kT

Chemical Potential formula is :

μ=-kT×lnVZinNνQ

Substitute VN=kTPin above formula,

μ=-kT×lnkTZinPνQ

eμkT=PνQkTZin

Gibb's Factor can be written as:

e-(ε1-μ)kT=e-ε1kT×PνQkTZin=PνQkTZineε1kT=PPo

03

Step 3. Calculation

Oxygen molecule quantum volume is:

νQ=h2πmkT3

Substitute the values of the variables in above formula,

νQ=6.63×10-34J·s2π(32×1.66×10-27kg)(1.38×10-23J/K)(310K)3=5.3×10-33m3

In equation, n=1Ze-(ε1-μ)kT+-(ε2-2μ)kT

Substitute eεKT=1790 and Po=2.03barat room temperature,

n=P2.03+1790P2.0321+P2.03+1790P2.032

Occupancy in this model is nearly 100%near lungs given P=0.20bar

04

Step 4. Table and Graph

The table is created between Pressure Pand fraction of occupied sites:

P
n
0.01
0.0461
0.02
0.1554
0.03
0.2899
0.04
0.4204
0.05
0.5332
0.06
0.6257
0.07
0.7001
0.08
0.7598
0.09
0.8080

The graph between fraction of occupied sites and oxygen partial pressure is created as,

We see that the occupancy rises gradually for smaller values of P. This shows that with cooperative binding, hemoglobin reacts with oxygen much fast in cells when Pis small.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

The previous two problems dealt with pure semiconductors, also called intrinsic semiconductors. Useful semiconductor devices are instead made from doped semiconductors, which contain substantial numbers of impurity atoms. One example of a doped semiconductor was treated in Problem 7.5. Let us now consider that system again. (Note that in Problem 7.5 we measured all energies relative to the bottom of the conduction band, Ee. We also neglected the distinction between g0and g0c; this simplification happens to be ok for conduction electrons in silicon.)

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