No, it does not contain gold. Hemoglobin is an organic polymer and globular protein consisting of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur with an iron core. When discussing molecules that are organic, they are typically composed of some combination of the elements sulfur, phosphorous, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and hydrogen. In college chem, we always learned to remember this with the word "SPONCH".
No, white blood cells do not contain hemoglobin; red blood cells contain hemoglobin (and it is the hemoglobin that gives them their red color).
Hemoglobin is made up of heme and globular protein. The heme contains iron inside a ring of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and oxygen molecules. The protein chains are complex helical structures.
False!it does contain hemoglobin
Erythrocytes are cells that contain hemoglobin. These are commonly known as red blood cells.
Yes, hemoglobin contains protein.
Red blood cells contain hemoglobin and transport oxygen
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorous, Sulfur and then Hemoglobin contains Iron and Chlorophyll contains magnesium.
The elements of hemoglobin are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, sulfur, iron, and oxygen. The chemical formula is C738H1166N812O203S2Fe
The "unusual" element in hemoglobin is iron, but hemoglobin also contains carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.
The hemoglobin molecule is what the oxygen molecule will attach to in the red blood cell.
Nitrogen doesn't contain air, but the air contains Nitrogen.