11 Blood Biochemistry
11 Blood Biochemistry
11 Blood Biochemistry
Blood Biochemistry
Teaching target
1. Master the basic raw materials of synthetic heme, the key enzymes
and the basic process.
2. Familiar with heme synthesis regulation.
• Composition of the blood
– The liquid element: plasma
– The formed elements: red blood cells
(erythrocytes), white blood cells
(leukocytes), and platelets
(thrombocytes).
• Plasma --- The blood fraction obtained after
removal of the cellular components.
• Serum --- The liquid element obtained by
allowing the blood to clot.
Blood is a fluid tissue composed
of plasma and blood cells that are
circulating in cardiovascular system.
Blood volume accounts for 7%~8 % of body weight
Functions of Blood
1. Play roles in maintaining homeostasis
(1) Buffer (pH of the blood)
(2) Transport ( gases, nutrients, waste products,
hormones, etc)
(3) Regulate (body temperature)
(WBC)
( RBC )
I. Composition
1. Plasma ( ~ 55% of blood volume)
① H2O ( 91% ~ 92% )
② Plasma proteins ( 6.5% ~ 8.5% ) (Functions-
p68)
globulin
albumin colloid substance
clotting factors (colloid osmotic pressure)
③ Electrolytes
Na+ K+ crystal substance
percentage of blood
volume occupied by
all blood cells
It is not a cell.
Cytoplasmic fragments of megakaryocytes.
It is filled with granules involved in blood clotting.
(serotonin, Ca2+, ADP etc.)
Platelet Adhesion
血小板与非血小板表面的粘着
Platelet Release Reaction
Platelet Aggregation
Hemostasis
Pathway of blood coagulation
Plasma proteins
Plasma proteins
concentration 65 –80 g l
simple or conjugated (glycoproteins, lipoproteins)
separation:
a) salting-out methods albumin, globulins,
fibrinogen
b) electrophoresis albumin, globulin 1, 2, ,
fractions: -
2 1
+
Elfo fractions of plasma proteins
1. blood coagulation
2. maintenance of homeostasis (pH, osmotic pressure)
3. defence against infection
4. transport of
nutrients
metabolites
hormones metabolic waste
drugs
General properties of plasma proteins
surgery
injury
cancer
Acute phase reactant response
Types of APRs:
Positive
1-antitrypsin
Negative
C-reactive
protein (CRP): albumin
~1000-fold
transferrin
increase!
fibrinogen
haptoglobin (HP)
ALBUMIN
Functions:
maintenance of the osmotic pressure of plasma
transport of:
• steroid hormones
• free fatty acids
• bilirubin
• drugs (sulfonamides, aspirin)
• Ca2+
• Cu2+
Causes of Albumin Deficiency
Protein malnutrition
Plasma
Plasma
“Buffy
Buffycoat”
coat
Red blood cells
Red blood cells
Anucleate
A. Albumin
B. Transferrin Transport proteins
C. Ceruloplasmin
D. Enzymes – coagulation enzymes, complement factors
E. C-reactive protein – acute phase reactant
F. Immunoglobulins – humoral immunity
ALBUMIN
66 kDa
Half-life ~ 20 days
Highly polar
Regulates oxidation-reduction,
transport and utilization of iron
Alanine
Creatine kinase
aminotransferase
Five classes of Ig
Precursors:
COOH COOH
CH2 + CH2
COOH ALA synthase
C~SCoA (pyridoxal phosphate) C O
O CH2NH2
In the mitochondria
(2) The formation of porphobilinogen (PBG)
COOH
O
CH2
OH
CH2
HO
O C
ALA O
H C H dehydratase
H N H
2H2O N
H2N H
In the cytosol
(3) The formation of uroporphyrinogen Ⅲ
(UPGⅢ) and coproporphyrinogen Ⅲ
(CPGⅢ)
Deaminase Linear
4× Porphobilinogen tetrapyrrol
UPG Ⅲ
isomerase
UPGⅢ
decarboxylase
CPGⅢ UPGⅢ
In the cytosol
(4) The formation of heme
CPGⅢ
oxidase
CPGⅢ Protoporphyrinogen Ⅸ
Protopor-
phyrinogen Ⅸ
oxidase
ferrochelatase
Heme Protoporphyrin Ⅸ
In the mitochondria
PBG
Heme
Gly
succinyl CoA Linear
Protoporphyrin Ⅸ tetrapyrrol
Protoporphyrinogen
Ⅸ
CPGⅢ UPGⅢ
2. Regulation of heme biosynthesis
Causes
• insufficient iron in the diet
• poor absorption of iron by the body
• ongoing blood loss, most commonly from menstruation or
from gradual blood loss in the intestinal tract
• periods of rapid growth
TREATMENT
• Iron Supplements
• Increasing iron in your diet (green leefy vegetables)
Aplastic Anemia
• TX:
• Blood transfusions
• Eliminating the cause
• Bone marrow transplant
• Frequently FATAL!
Pernicious Anemia
• Treatment
• Vitamin B12 injections once a month
• Vitamin B12 absorbed in the mouth
• Vitamin B12 given through the nose
Hemorrhagic Anemia
• A type of anemia caused from heavy blood loss
due to bleeding somewhere in the body.
Causes
• Large blood loss in life-threatening situation such
as traumatic injury, massive gastrointestinal
hemorrhage, such as ulcers, hemorrhoids, gastritis
(inflammation of the stomach) and cancer.
Treatment
• stop bleeding (both internally and externally)
• IV saline, plasma or albumins
• Possible blood transfusions for large amounts of
blood loss.
Leukemia
• Type of cancer
• Overproduction of immature white
blood cells
• They take the place of RBCs
Because these abnormal blood cells are defective, they don't help
protect the body against infection the way normal white blood
cells do. And because they grow uncontrollably, they take over
the bone marrow and interfere with the body's production of
other important types of cells in the bloodstream, like red blood
cells (which carry oxygen) and platelets (which help blood to
clot).
Infectious mononucleosis
sometimes called "mono"
or "the kissing disease," is
an infection usually caused
by the Epstein-Barr virus
(EBV).
AA = normal
Aa = sickle cell trait (few symptoms)
aa = sickle cell anemia
If both parents are
carriers, child has a ¼
chance of having the
disease
Complications
1. Pain
• Lethargy
• Lifelong anemia
(low red blood count)
• Organ failure
• Stroke
• Jaundice (yellowing of the skin
and whites of the eyes). It occurs
because the rapid breakdown of
abnormal red blood cells leads to
a build-up of a waste product in
the body called bilirubin
Treatments
• There is no cure for Sickle cell
• Treatment is aimed at relieving pain,
preventing infections and organ
damage.
• Some may be cured with bone marrow
and stem cell transplants but it is risky
and more research is being done.
HEMOPHILIA
This disorder causes a failure of the
blood to clot
Patients can be treated with blood
transfusions that include clotting agents.
Hemophilia is carried on the X
chromosome
Females X H X H normal
X H X h carrier
X h X h hemophiliac
Males X H Y normal
X h Y hemophiliac
Research
• Research what clotting factors are missing with the
different forms of hemophilia.
• Symptoms
• Treatments
• Prognosis
• What diseases could they be susceptible too and
why?
• What is thrombocytopenia?
• What vitamin may doctors prescribe before surgery to
help our blood clot? Why?
• What is a normal WBC count and What WBC Counts
do we see with leukemia?
Methemoglobinemia
• a disorder
characterized by
the presence of a
higher than normal
level of
methemoglobin
(metHb) in the
blood
• Methemoglobin is an
oxidized form of
hemoglobin that has
a decreased affinity
for oxygen, resulting
in an increased
affinity of oxygen to
other heme sites
and overall reduced
ability to release
oxygen to tissues
• The oxygen–
hemoglobin
dissociation curve
is therefore shifted
to the left. When
methemoglobin
concentration is
elevated in red
blood cells, tissue
hypoxia can occur.
• Normal methemoglobin levels are <1%
• Elevated levels of methemoglobin in the blood are
caused when the mechanisms that defend against
oxidative stress within the red blood cell are
overwhelmed and the oxygen carrying ferrous ion
(Fe2+) of the heme group of the hemoglobin
molecule is oxidized to the ferric state (Fe3+).
• This converts hemoglobin to methemoglobin,
resulting in a reduced ability to release oxygen to
tissues and thereby hypoxia.
• This can give the blood a bluish or chocolate-
brown color.
2 types
• Congenital
– Genetic defect present at birth (recessive gene)
• Aquired
– Exposure to exogenous oxidizing drugs and their
metabolites (such as benzocaine, dapsone and
nitrates) may accelerate the rate of formation of
methemoglobin up to one-thousandfold,
overwhelming the protective enzyme systems and
acutely increasing methemoglobin levels.
– Infants under 6 months of age are particularly
susceptible to methemoglobinemia caused by nitrates
ingested in drinking water (called blue-baby syndrome
Treatment
• Methemoglobinemia can be treated with
supplemental oxygen and methylene
blue1% solution 1 to 2 mg/kg administered
intravenously slowly over five minutes
followed by IV flush with normal saline.
Methylene blue restores the iron in
hemoglobin to its normal (reduced)
oxygen-carrying state.
PROGRESS
Puping Liang, Chenhui Ding,
Hongwei Sun et al. Correction of
β-thalassemia mutant by base
editor in human embryos.
Protein & Cell, First Online: 23
September 2017,
doi:10.1007/s13238-017-0475-6
Questions
1. What are the common characteristics of
plasma proteins?
2. Describes the function of plasma proteins.
3. What are the characteristics of the synthesis of
heme?