Friday, September 15, 2017

A Vampires Favorite Meal



There are over 5 liters of blood in an average person. We know that when we injure ourselves this mysterious red liquid comes flowing out. But, what is our blood made out of? What makes our blood so special? 

In 1840 hemoglobin was discovered by Friedrich Ludwig Hunefeld, who was a member of the German Biochemistry Association. He discovered hemoglobin by looking at the blood of an earthworm. He allowed the blood of the earthworm to dry and crystallize between two glass slides. He looked at the slide under a microscope and he saw sharp bright red structures. He found that these structures were what came to be hemoglobin. Overtime it was found that not only earthworms had this structure, so did most invertebrates. Overtime, it was found that this hemoglobin structure actually transported oxygen throughout the body. Hemoglobin transports oxygen from respiratory organs such as the lungs, and releases it in the tissues to help with cell survival. The iron protein forms an unstable reversible bond with oxygen. Hemoglobin actually forms in the cells of bone marrow and is made of four heme groups surrounding a globin group. This makes it a quaternary structure. Hemoglobin is what gives blood its color and red blood cells their shape.  The human body actually contains three types of hemoglobin. These are Hemoglobin A, Hemoglobin A2, and Hemoglobin F. Hemoglobin A is the most common type. Hemoglobin A2 and F are extremely rare. Hemoglobin also has a buffering factor. This protein is what keeps blood at the pH of 7.4. If there is an accumulation of carbon dioxide within the blood, this will cause the pH to decrease. With hemoglobin maintaining the pH, this allows the bodies enzymatic reactions to occur without any problems. Hemoglobin is obviously essential to life itself. If we didn’t have this protein in our body, we would have no way of transporting oxygen from one end of our body to another. 

It is crazy to think something so small is what is keeping our bodies alive. It is even crazier to think that hemoglobin wasn’t even known of until 177 years ago. Our bodies truly are a wonderland. 




2 comments:

  1. It really is insane to think that something that small is keeping out bodies alive. I know about hemoglobin from the classes I have taken, but I never knew that he had examined an earthworm to discover hemoglobin. That was so interesting to find out.

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  2. Have you ever seen this "alkaline diet", which encourages avoidance of acidic foods to maintain the bodies pH? HA!, I say. As you explain, hemoglobin requires a very tight pH range...if you left the range by eating fried and processed foods (you can't--I've tried), you'd die of oxygen deprivation long before cancer developed. So.
    https://draxe.com/alkaline-diet/

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