Biology, asked by aayushikumar4010, 2 months ago


Why does haemoglobin binds with oxygen in the alveolar capillary blood while in tissues it dissociates from oxygen?​

Answers

Answered by jaiswalnancy2003
0

Answer:

Binding of one CO molecule to hemoglobin increases the affinity of the other binding spots for oxygen, leading to a left shift in the dissociation curve. This shift prevents oxygen unloading in peripheral tissue and therefore the oxygen concentration of the tissue is much lower than normal.

Answered by aksahdileep
1

Explanation:

Binding of one CO molecule to hemoglobin increases the affinity of the other binding spots for oxygen, leading to a left shift in the dissociation curve. This shift prevents oxygen unloading in peripheral tissue and therefore the oxygen concentration of the tissue is much lower than normal.

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