• Homeostasis → maintaining the internal environment within restricted limits using physiological
control systems
Communication systems
• Animals and plants need to respond to changes in the internal and external environment
→ important for survival and to enable cells to function normally
• The activities of different organs need to be coordinated
→ e.g. both heart rate and breathing rate must increase during exercise
• Communication systems → used by multicellular organisms to coordinate responses
→ e.g. the nervous system and endocrine system in animals
• Endocrine glands → groups of cells that secrete hormones into the blood
• Cells communicate using cell signalling
→ adjacent neurones communicate by secreting neurotransmitters which bind to receptors (see
the nervous system notes)
→ secretion of hormones into the blood allows communication between distant cells
→ hormone receptors are found on the cell-surface membrane or in the cytoplasm of target cells
Negative feedback
• Restores systems to their original level
• A negative feedback loop has a receptor, coordination centre and effector
→ receptors detect fluctuations away from the set point (the optimum level)
→ effectors bring about responses to return the level to the set point
• Can involve the nervous system or endocrine system
-min
• Often separate mechanisms to control fluctuations
Gres" ine
in different directions away from the original level
→ allows greater control
• Examples of control using negative feedback
→ control of blood glucose
→ control of body temperature
time → control of blood water potential
Positive feedback
• Not used to maintain homeostasis → positive feedback amplifies a change
• A change in the level of a biological factor causes a response where the factor is increased or
decreased further from the set point
stimulus Example: hypothermia occurs when body temperature lowers
·
Ipli
->
too far for the normal negative feedback mechanisms to be
effective
ge → a lowered body temperature reduces kinetic energy of
E molecules such as enzymes
→ enzyme activity reduces and therefore rate of
E respiration reduces
A
Ectotherms Endotherms
• Regulate body temperature using behavioural • Generate heat internally through respiration
responses e.g. basking in the sun • Have a higher metabolic rate
• Have a lower metabolic rate • Mainly use physiological responses and negative
• Internal body temperature changes with the feedback to regulate body temperature within
external environmental temperature narrow limits (see below)
→ depend on the environment for their body → sometimes use behavioural responses as well
heat e.g. huddling together
• Examples: reptiles and some fish • Examples: birds and mammals
Thermoregulation in endotherms
There are also temperature
• Peripheral temperature receptors
receptors in the hypothalamus
→ found in the skin
which detect the temperature
→ detect the temperature of the skin and send impulses of the blood (core temperature).
along sensory neurones to the hypothalamus
• Hypothalamus sends impulses along motor neurones to the effectors
• Effectors → sweat glands, erector pili muscles, skeletal muscles, smooth muscle in arterioles
Response to high body temperature Response to low body temperature
• Sweat glands secrete more sweat • Sweat glands secrete less sweat
• Erector pili muscles relax → hairs on skin lie flat • Erector pili muscles contract → hairs on skin
so that no air is trapped stand up to trap an insulating layer of air
• Smooth muscle of arterioles in skin relaxes • Smooth muscle of arterioles in skin contracts
→ arterioles dilate and more blood flows close → arterioles constrict and less blood flows
to the skin surface to radiate heat close to the skin surface
• Skeletal muscles contract rapidly to generate
impulses +O
->
metabolic heat through respiration
impulses to effectors
↳
hypothalamus
~ erector pilimuscles -> relax
detected
by sweat
glands -
more sweat
Excretion
• The removal of metabolic waste products from the body
• Carbon dioxide must be excreted via the lungs to keep blood pH from becoming too acidic
→ a waste product of respiration
• Nitrogenous waste must be excreted by the liver and kidneys
→ ammonia is a waste product of amino acid metabolism
→ ammonia is toxic so must be converted to urea (less toxic) for excretion
Liver structure
Af atche
• Hepatic artery hep
→ an unbranched narrow vessel that brings
oxygenated blood to the liver
r
S
• Hepatic portal vein
"OAll"hepatic
→ a branched vessel that brings blood directly
from the gut (contains substances absorbed
in the small intestine) 1 ~
• Hepatic vein
→ a wide vessel that takes deoxygenated blood - ↳
away from the liver
je I y
• Bile duct
1
→ carries bile from the liver to the gall bladder
for storage, then to the small intestine ·
adder
gall g
act
-
portal
• The liver is made up of hexagonal lobules each with a central vein
• Hepatocytes carry out the metabolic functions of the liver e.g. converting glucose to glycogen
• Kupffer cells destroy bacteria and dead red blood cells
• Sinusoids → the lumens of the blood vessels where the blood
-
from the hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein mix
-
R
central → lined with thin cells for a short diffusion distance
-
vein from blood into hepatocytes
-
·illman
Sg
Oooo
gigg.
usi
⑧
80
... ·
of
branch a
.::
so
S a --P- Make sure to look online
*
bile duct a
a
-co
↑
W
E 80 i -O
: and in past papers at
↳
↑
- ~
28
- " - ↑
-
real labelled histology
8 88
......
kupffer cells
⑧ ·::
images of the liver.
8 o .
⑧000
⑧"
....
·
⑧
808
:
: ....
⑧ 00 ⑧ See the Module 2
o·
⑧0000
.....
... notes for guidance on
⑧
... scientific drawings.
⑧
Liver functions
• Stores glucose as glycogen → glycogen can be hydrolysed to glucose to raise blood glucose
• Produces bile → a substance which emulsifies lipids during lipid digestion
→ stored in the gall bladder before release into the small intestine
• Detoxification → harmful substances are removed from the blood in the sinusoids
→ some drugs are broken down by the liver into substances which can be excreted
→ ethanol (alcohol) is used as a respiratory substrate but this can cause fat
accumulation and cirrhosis (scarring) over time
→ lactate from anaerobic respiration is converted to pyruvate
• Deamination of amino acids and formation of urea
→ excess amino acids are broken down
→ the amino groups are removed to form ammonia and organic acids (this is called deamination)
→ organic acids can enter the Krebs cycle, or be converted to glucose or fat
→ ammonia is toxic so is converted to less toxic urea in the ornithine cycle
The ornithine cycle involves
reacting ammonia with carbon
dioxide to produce urea. The
cycle requires ATP.
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