Hemoglobin Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Hemoglobin stocks.

Hemoglobin Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Oct 1 MASI Masimo Stock Gets Relative Strength Rating Upgrade
Oct 1 DGX Is HealthEquity Stock a Buy Now Amid Strength in HSAs?
Oct 1 DGX ITGR Shares Gain on the Divestiture of Its Non-Medical Business Line
Oct 1 APLS Apellis Pharmaceuticals: Assessing The Impact Of The Negative CHMP Opinion
Oct 1 MASI Best Momentum Stocks to Buy for October 1st
Oct 1 ALNY Is Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (ALNY) Stock Outpacing Its Medical Peers This Year?
Oct 1 ALNY Not Holding Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (ALNY) Hurt Fidelity Growth Strategies Fund’s Performance
Sep 30 MASI Are You a Momentum Investor? This 1 Stock Could Be the Perfect Pick
Sep 30 DGX Baxter Shares May Gain on the Launch of Its Latest Vest APX System
Sep 30 DGX Is Quest Diagnostics (DGX) Stock Undervalued Right Now?
Sep 29 ALNY Alnylam Highlights New Data From HELIOS-B Study of Vutrisiran for the Treatment of Transthyretin Amyloidosis With Cardiomyopathy at Heart Failure Society of America Annual Scientific Meeting 2024
Sep 27 DGX PDCO Shares Gain Following New Deals to Boost Animal Health Business
Sep 26 FULC Fulcrum Therapeutics swings up 17% on Pfizer sickle cell drug setback
Sep 26 DGX Here's Why you Should Retain Nevro Stock in Your Portfolio Now
Sep 26 ALNY Alnylam to Webcast TTR Investor Day
Sep 25 MASI Why Masimo Stock Crushed the Market Today
Sep 25 MASI Sector Update: Health Care Stocks Fall Late Afternoon
Sep 25 MASI Masimo CEO Joe Kiani Resigns Following Politan Proxy Battle; Shares Jump
Sep 25 MASI Masimo Names Interim CEO As Activist Board Members Step In; Joe Kiani Exits Amid Legal Clash
Sep 25 DGX NVRO Stock May Gain on the FDA Approval of Its HFX AdaptivAI Platform
Hemoglobin

Hemoglobin (American) or haemoglobin (British) (), abbreviated Hb or Hgb, is the iron-containing oxygen-transport metalloprotein in the red blood cells (erythrocytes) of almost all vertebrates (the exception being the fish family Channichthyidae) as well as the tissues of some invertebrates. Haemoglobin in the blood carries oxygen from the lungs or gills to the rest of the body (i.e. the tissues). There it releases the oxygen to permit aerobic respiration to provide energy to power the functions of the organism in the process called metabolism. A healthy individual has 12 to 16 grams of haemoglobin in every 100 ml of blood.
In mammals, the protein makes up about 96% of the red blood cells' dry content (by weight), and around 35% of the total content (including water). Haemoglobin has an oxygen-binding capacity of 1.34 mL O2 per gram, which increases the total blood oxygen capacity seventy-fold compared to dissolved oxygen in blood. The mammalian hemoglobin molecule can bind (carry) up to four oxygen molecules.Hemoglobin is involved in the transport of other gases: It carries some of the body's respiratory carbon dioxide (about 20–25% of the total) as carbaminohemoglobin, in which CO2 is bound to the heme protein. The molecule also carries the important regulatory molecule nitric oxide bound to a globin protein thiol group, releasing it at the same time as oxygen.Haemoglobin is also found outside red blood cells and their progenitor lines. Other cells that contain haemoglobin include the A9 dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra, macrophages, alveolar cells, lungs, retinal pigment epithelium, hepatocytes, mesangial cells in the kidney, endometrial cells, cervical cells and vaginal epithelial cells. In these tissues, haemoglobin has a non-oxygen-carrying function as an antioxidant and a regulator of iron metabolism.Haemoglobin and haemoglobin-like molecules are also found in many invertebrates, fungi, and plants. In these organisms, haemoglobins may carry oxygen, or they may act to transport and regulate other small molecules and ions such as carbon dioxide, nitric oxide, hydrogen sulfide and sulfide. A variant of the molecule, called leghaemoglobin, is used to scavenge oxygen away from anaerobic systems, such as the nitrogen-fixing nodules of leguminous plants, before the oxygen can poison (deactivate) the system.

Browse All Tags