Blood carries oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body. To do this blood cells have a specialized protein that is able to bind oxygen to the blood cell. This protein is known as hemoglobin.
Hemoglobin
Hemoglobin
Red blood cells contain the protein hemoglobin, which binds with oxygen, and transport the oxygen throughout the body.
Haemoglobin. That's what gives red blood cells their colour, too.
Haemoglobin is a globular protein. A single haemoglobin protein contains 4 heme pigments which contain positively-charged iron (Fe2+) which is what binds reversibly with oxygen (O2-). When the O2 reaches the tissue cells where it needed, the Fe2+ releases the O2.
No. Red blood cells do. Red blood cells transport oxygen form the lungs to tissues.
Hemoglobin
The iron atom is an essential component of the heme prosthetic group in the protein hemoglobin, which is responsible for the transport of carbon dioxide and oxygen.
Hemoglobin is the protein that carries oxygen found in red blood cells.
It is an iron-based protein called hemoglobin.
Red blood cells contain the protein hemoglobin, which binds with oxygen, and transport the oxygen throughout the body.
Red blood cells are packed full of a protein called hemoglobin. Hemoglobin has a molecule of iron in each protein molecule. This hemoglobin is what carries oxygen. The oxygen binds with the iron.
hemoglobin a protein containing 4 iron atoms that is used to transport oxygen.
The main function of red blood cells is to transport oxygen around in the body. The oxygen is transported by the hemoglobin (a protein) which is inside the red blood cells.
Haemoglobin. That's what gives red blood cells their colour, too.
red blood cells transport oxygen :)
blood transport oxygen around the body
Hemoglobin is a protein. In particular, it's the protein that carries iron and helps transport oxygen to where it needs to be in the blood. It's also what makes blood red.