Biology, asked by dada4136, 8 months ago

Why chloride shift occurs in RBC​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Explanation:

The chloride shift is an exchange of ions that takes place in our red blood cells in order to ensure that no build up of electric change takes place during gas exchange. Within our tissues, the cells produce a bunch of carbon dioxide molecules that are ultimately expelled by the cell and travel to the blood plasma

Answered by sheeba123waseem
3

Answer:  Mate here’s your answer

The chloride shift or "Hamburger effect" describes the movement of chloride into RBCs which occurs when the buffer effects of deoxygenated haemoglobin increase the intracellular bicarbonate concentration, and the bicarbonate is exported from the RBC in exchange for chloride.

mark me the brainliest

Similar questions
Math, 4 months ago