Hydrogen.
Carbon monoxide and oxygen.
Oxygen and carbon monoxide
yes
No. Carbon monoxide binds to the same site as oxygen, i.e. the central iron. Carbon dioxide binds to the globin molecule.
Because carbon can bind to itself (in multiple ways).
to bind it into sugars that store energy
Carbon dioxide and BPG bind to amino acids located on hemoglobin. Oxygen molecules bind to the iron molecules located in the heme. Each hemoglobin molecule can carry up to four oxygen molecules, one on each of the four iron molecules. Nitric oxide can also bind to hemoglobin when either oxygen or carbon dioxide are bound to the hemoglobin.
4: The prefix "tetra" means "four", and the most common valence of hydrogen is 1.
The molecule that can bind to RuBisCO and inhibit carbon fixation rates is oxygen. This process is known as photorespiration, and occurs when RuBisCO binds with oxygen instead of carbon dioxide, leading to a decrease in the efficiency of photosynthesis.
Carbon monoxide binds to hemoglobin with a higher affinity than oxygen, forming carboxyhemoglobin. This can displace oxygen from hemoglobin, reducing the blood's ability to transport oxygen to tissues, which can lead to serious health consequences.
inorganic ;as hydrogen atom is not covalently bind with carbon atom
inorganic ;as hydrogen atom is not covalently bind with carbon atom