hemoglobin
hemoglobin
Haemoglobin. That's what gives red blood cells their colour, too.
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.
Thrombocytes contain an occasionally active thrombin protein.
Hemoglobin is the name of a protein that is found in red blood cells, which has the capacity to absorb and release oxygen.
Hemoglobin is the protein that attracts and carries oxygen in red blood cells. It binds to oxygen in the lungs and releases it in tissues throughout the body.
The "Rh" factor was named after the Rhesus monkey, in which the blood protein was first identified. The discovery of this protein in humans was made in the late 1930s by Landsteiner and Wiener, who named it "Rh" after the initial of the Rhesus monkey.
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.
Red blood cells are red because they contain a protein called hemoglobin, which binds to oxygen and gives the cells their red color. Brown blood may indicate that the blood has been exposed to oxygen for a prolonged period of time, causing the hemoglobin to oxidize and change color.
The scientific name for the blood cells that carry oxygen to the body's cells is erythrocytes.
and a red blood cell or in a red blood cell? if its in a red blood cell i would say haemoglobin
Another name for white blood cells are " Lymphnoytes"