bilirubin
Hemoglobin molecules liberated from red blood cells are broken down into subunits of heme, an iron containing portion, and globin, a protein. The heme further decomposes into iron and a greenish pigment called biliverdin. Biliverdin eventually is converted to an orange pigment called bilirubin.
Heme is the featured component of hemoglobin. Hemoglobin is the red pigment that gives red blood cells their characteristic color and their essential ability to transport oxygen.
It is an organic compound ( a group ) of which the most commonly known is heme, the pigment that gives blood its red color. Word (prophyrin) comes from Greek word for purple, relates to their deep color. Heme is cofactor in protein hemoglobin.
Hemoglobin is a protein found in red blood cells that functions to transport oxygen throughout the body. It is composed of a heme group, which contains iron and binds with oxygen, and globin chains, which provide the structure for the heme groups. The interaction between heme and globin allows hemoglobin to efficiently transport oxygen from the lungs to the body's tissues.
When a hemoglobin molecule is broken apart, the iron pigment is released. This is what is called the -"heme" part of the molecule.
No, chlorophyll and glucose are not the same thing. Chlorophyll is a pigment found in plants that is essential for photosynthesis, while glucose is a simple sugar produced during photosynthesis that serves as a source of energy for the plant.
Hemoglobin is an oxygen-carrying pigment in human blood. It includes iron in its makeup.
When the erythrocytes are destroyed, haemoglobin breaks down, the heme part of it goes through a series of transformation: Heme → biliverdin (green pigment) biliverdin → bilirubin (orange-yellow pigment) Bilirubin + blood albumin → bound bilirubin (in peripheral blood) Bound bilirubin + glucuronic acid → conjugated bilirubin. (in liver) Conjugated bilirubin + intestinal bacteria → several pigments, including - stercobolin (orange-brown pigment, excreted in feces) and - urobilinogen (reabsorbed into bile/blood, finally excreted in urine)
Heme + globin is Hemoglobin.
Heme is decomposed into iron and biliverdin
The breakdown product of heme is bilirubin. Bilirubin is produced when heme is broken down in the liver as a part of the normal process of recycling heme from old red blood cells.
Heme iron comes from animal sources, while non-heme iron comes from plant sources, so I believe that because mussels are animals, mussels therefore do contain heme iron. Fish also contains heme iron.