
Answer
Effect of CO₂ Concentration on Oxygen Affinity (Bohr Effect)
The Bohr effect describes how increasing carbon dioxide (CO₂) concentration or decreasing pH (more H⁺ ions) causes hemoglobin to reduce its affinity for oxygen.
- Increased CO₂ leads to the formation of carbonic acid (H₂CO₃), which dissociates into H⁺ and HCO₃⁻, lowering the pH.
- Lower pH protonates certain residues (like histidine) in hemoglobin, stabilizing the T (tense) state, which has lower oxygen affinity.
- This promotes oxygen release in actively respiring tissues where CO₂ is high.
This physiological adaptation enhances oxygen delivery to where it’s most needed.
Incorrect. The Bohr effect applies to hemoglobin, not myoglobin. Myoglobin’s oxygen affinity is not significantly affected by CO₂ or pH.
Incorrect. Increasing CO₂ concentration decreases hemoglobin’s oxygen affinity, promoting oxygen release — not retention.
Incorrect. Myoglobin does not exhibit the Bohr effect in the same way as hemoglobin, and its oxygen affinity is relatively stable.
Incorrect. One of the provided options is indeed correct (the effect on hemoglobin’s oxygen affinity).
