3b (more exchange/transport) Flashcards

You may prefer our related Brainscape-certified flashcards:
1
Q

what is haemoglobin?

A

a large protein with a quaternary structure (4 polypeptide chains)
each chain has a haem group which contains an iron ion

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

what does affinity for oxygen mean?
how many oxygens can bind to haemoglobin?

A

tendency to combine with oxygen
4

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

what is the reversable reaction for oxygen association and dissociation?

A

haemoglobin + oxygen <-> oxyhaemoglobin
(Hb+ 4O2<-> HbO8)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

what is partial pressure of oxygen/ CO2
(pO2) (pCO2)

A

measure of oxygen/ carbon dioxide concentration. greater conc of dissolved O2/ CO2 the higher the partial pressure

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

what does affinity for oxygen depend on?

A

the partial pressure of oxygen
oxygen loads onto haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin where theres a high pO2
oxyhaemoglobin unloads its oxygen where theres a lower pO2

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

think of a question for this

A

O2 enters blood cappilaries at alveoli which have a high pO2 so O2 loads onto haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin
when cells respire, they use up O2 which lowers the pO2. rbc deliver oxyhaemoglobin into respiring tissues where it unloads oxygen
haemoglobin then returns to lungs to pick up more O2

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

what is is an oxygen dissociation curve?

A

shows how affinity for oxygen varies and how saturated haemoglobin is with oxygen at any partial pressure

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

describe oxygen dissociation curve

A

see poster on it
1)tertiary structure quite tight so difficult for o2 to physically get in- hard for 1st o2 to associate- low affinity so gradient flat
2)1st o2 binding changes shape of quaternary structure so easier for other sub units to bind to o2 to gradient steeper
3)smaller increase in partial pressure needed for 2nd o2 to bind- positive cooperativity so gradient steepens
4)in theory, easy for 4th to bind but hard in practice as majorit of binding sites are occupied so less likely for o2 to find empty site- conc grad decreases

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

what is the bohr effect?

A

haemoglobin gives up oxygen more readily at a higher pCO2
cells respire and produce CO2 so raise pCO2
increases rate of oxygen unloading so dissociation curve shifts right
saturation of blood with oxygen is lower for a given pO2 so more oxygen released
check book

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

how does haemoglobin and dissociation curve change for different organisms

A

diff organism= diff type of haemoglobin= diff O2 transporting abilities
environment w low O2 conc- haemoglobin w higher affinity for O2 than humans so curve shifts left (lugworm left)
very active so have high O2 demand- haemoglobin w lower affinity for O2 than humans so curve shifts right

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

what are the names of all the blood vessels entering and leaving the heart lungs and kidneys?

A

see page 74 of revision guide

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

what does blood transport?

A

respiratory gases, products of digestion, metabolic waste and hormones

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

why is the heart called a double circulatory system? what is the hearts blood supply called?

A

there are 2 circuits
one takes blood from the heart to the lungs and back to the heart and the other takes blood around the rest of the body
the left and right coronary arteries

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

what are arteries?

A

blood vessels that carry blood away from the heart
thick muscular walls
elastic tissue to stretch and recoil to maintain pressure
endothelium (inner lining) is folded so artery can stretch maintaining high bp
all carry oxygenated blood apart from pulmonary artery

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

what are arterioles?

A

arteries divide into smaller blood vessels which form a network
blood directed to diff areas of demand by muscles inside arterioles which contract to restrict the blood flow or relax to allow blood flow

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

what are veins?
adaptations?
what do they carry?

A

blood vessels which carry blood to heart
wider lumen than arteries with very little elastic or muscle tissue
contain valves to prevent backflow
flow through veins helped by contraction of body muscles surrounding them
all carry deoxygenated blood except for pulmonary veins

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

what are capillaries?
how are they adapted?

A

smallest blood vessel which arterioles branch into
substances exchanged between cells and capillaries so theyre adapted for efficient diffusion
-found very near cells in exchange tissues so short diffusion pathway
- walls one cell thick so short diffusion pathway
- lots of capillaries (form capillary bed) so large surface area

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

what is tissue fluid?
what is it made from?
what is its role?

A

fluid that surrounds cells in tissues
made from small molecules that leave the blood plasma like water, oxygen, nutrients but not rbc or big proteins as they are too big to be pushed out of capillary walls
cells take in oxygen and nutrients from tissue fluid and release metabolic waste into it

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

how is tissue fluid formed?

A

in capillary bed, substances move out of capillaries into tissue fluid by pressure filtration
1. at start of capillary bed, nearest arteries, hydrostatic pressure in cap is greater than tissue fluid
2. difference means overall outward pressure forces fluid out of capillaries and into spaces around cells forming tissue fluid
3. as fluid leaves, hydrostatic pressure reduces in capillaries so is lower at venule end
4. due to fluid loss and increasing conc of plasma proteins (which dont leave caps), the water pot at the venule end is lower than tissue fluid
5. so some water re-enters caps from tissue fluid at venule end by osmosis

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

what happens to excess tissue fluid?

A

drained into lymphatic system which transports it from tissues and puts it back in circulatory system

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

what can cause an accumulation of tissue fluid in the tissues?

A

high blood pressure as it creates a high hydrostatic pressure in the capillaries

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

label a diagram of the heart
what does the right side pump?
what does the left side pump?

A

see poster
right- deoxygenated blood to lungs
left- oxygenated blood to whole body

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

what does the left ventricle do?
how is it adapted?

A

thicker more muscular walls than right so it can contract powerfully enough to pump blood all the way around the body
right only needs to go to lungs

24
Q

why do ventricles have thicker walls than atria?

A

they have to push blood out of heart whereas atria just need to push blood into ventricles

25
Q

what are the AV valves?

A

link artery to ventricle and prevent backflow in atria when ventricles contract

26
Q

what are SL valves?

A

link ventricles to pulmonary artery and aorta and prevent backflow into heart after ventricles contract

27
Q

what do the cords do in the heart?

A

attach atrioventricular valves to pulmonary artery and aorta and stop blood flowing back into heart after ventricles contract

28
Q

when do valves open and close?

A

only open one way
higher pressure behind valve- forced open
higher pressure in front of valve- forced shut
means blood only flows one way through the heart

29
Q

what is the cardiac cycle?

A

ongoing sequence of contraction (systole) and relaxation (diastole) of the atria and ventricles that keeps blood continuously circulating

30
Q

what are the three simplified stages of the cardiac cycle?

A

1) atria systole
- ventricles relax and atria contract so decrease vol and increase press which pusses blood into ventricles. slight increase in ventricular pressure and chamber vol as ventricles receive blood from atria
2) ventricular systole
- atria relax and ventricles contract so decrease vol and increase press. press higher than atria so AV valve shuts. press in ventricles also higher than aorta/ pulmonary artery so SL valves open and blood forced into arteries
3) ventricular and atrial diastole
- ventricles and atria both relax. higher press in pulmonary artery and aorta closes SL valves to prevent bf. blood returns to heart and atria fill
again due to high pressure in vena cava and pulmonary vein. so, pressure in atria increases. ventricles continue to relax so pressure falls below pressure of atria so AV valves open and blood flows passively into ventricles. atria contract and cycle begins again

31
Q

How do you work out cardiac output?

A

heart rate x stroke volume

32
Q

explain the graph showing pressure in cardiac cycle

A

see poster

33
Q

what is digestion?

A

polymers being hydrolysed into monomers so that they are small enough to diffuse/ actively transport across a membrane to be absorbed into the blood

34
Q

what are carbohydrates broken down by?
where are these enzymes produced?

A

amylase- converts starch to maltose by hydrolysing glycosidic bonds
produced by salivary glands and pancreas

membrane bound disaccharidases- enzymes attached to cell membranes of epithelial cells lining the ileum. help breakdown disaccharides into monosaccharides by hydrolysing glycosidic bonds eg maltase, sucrase, lactase

35
Q

what are lipids broken down by?

A

lipase catalyses breakdown into fatty acids and monoglycerides
made in pancreas but used in small intestine

bile salts produced by liver- emulsify fats to increase sa

once broken down, monoglycerides and fatty acids and bile salts join to form micelles

36
Q

what are proteins broken down by?

A

endopeptidases- hydrolyse peptide bonds within protein, eg trypsin which is synthesised in pancreas and secreted in small intestine and pepsin which is released by into stomach by cells in stomach lining- only works in acidic cond hence hcl in stomach

exopeptidases- hydrolyses bonds at ends of protein molecules, remove single amino acid from proteins, dipeptidases are exopeptidases for dipeptides - separate the 2 amino acids by hydrolysing peptide bond, located in cell-surface membrane of epithelial cells

37
Q

way to remember what endopeptidases and exopeptidases do

A

enDopeptidases- break bonds insiDe protein

38
Q

how are monosaccharides absorbed?

A

glucose and galactose are absorbed by co-transport with sodium ions
fructose is absorbed via facilitated diffusion through a different transporter protein

39
Q

how are monoglycerides and fatty acids absorbed?

A

micelles help move monoglycerides and fatty acids to epithelium
because they constantly break up and reform, they can release monosaccharides and fatty acids allowing them to be absorbed
monoglycerides and fatty acids are lipid soluble so can diffuse directly across epithelial cell membrane

once inside, transported to er where they reassemble to triglycerides.
starting at er and moving to golgi, they associate with cholesterol and lipoproteins to form chylomicrons which move out of epithelial cells by exocytosis and into lacteals (at centre of each villus) then into blood
triglycerides in them are hydrolysed by enzyme in endothelial cells of blood caps- then diffuse into cells

40
Q

how are amino acids absorbed?

A

via co-transport

41
Q

what is an atheroma?
what is chd?

A

when damage occurs to endothelium of artery, wbc and lipids clump together to form fatty streaks which build up and form plaques called atheromas. this partially blocks lumen of artery so restricts blood flow increasing bp
chd is a type of cardiovascular disease occuring when theres lots of atheromas. can lead to myocardial infarction

42
Q

what is an aneurysm?

A

atheromas damage and weaken and narrow arteries increasing bp
blood flows through at high bp it may push inner layers of artery through the outer elastic layer causing it to swell
the aneurysm can burst causing a haemorrhage

43
Q

what is thrombosis?

A

atheroma can rupture endothelium and damage wall leaving rough surface
platelets and fibrin accumulate at damaged site and form clot which blocks artery or can dislodge and block blood vessel elsewhere
debris from rupture can also cause another blood clot further down

44
Q

what is myocardial infarction?

A

coronary artery becomes blocked so area of heart cut off from blood supply so receives no o2 and cant respire- causes myocardial infarction (heart attack) which can damage heart muscle. large area infected can be fatal as causes heart failure
chest pain, short of breath, sweating

45
Q

risk factors of cvd

A

high blood cholesterol- main constituent of atheromas so can raise bp and cause clots and myocardial infarction
saturated fat- increase cholesterol
salt- increase bp
smoking- nicotine raises bp, co reduces transport of o2 so can cause heart attack, decreases antioxidants in blood so cell damage in artery wall more likely
high bp- can damage walls, increased risk of atheromas which leads to clots
anything raising bp (weight, no exercise, alcohol) ,age, being male

46
Q

what is the mass transport system in plants?

A

xylem tissue- transports water and mineral ions from roots to leaves
phloem tissue- transports organic substances up and down the plant

47
Q

what are xylem vessels?

A

part of the xylem tissue that actually transports the water and ions. long, tube like structures formed from dead cells. no end walls so uninterrupted tube

48
Q

what is the cohesion-tension theory of water transport?

A

cohesion and tension help water move against gravity
. water evaporates from leaves
. this creates tension which pulls more water into leaf
. water molecules are cohesive so when some are pulled up, others follow so whole column of water moves
. water enters stem through roots

49
Q

what is transpiration?

A

evaporation of water from plants surface
.water evaporates from moist cell walls and accumulates in spaces between cells in leaf
. stomata open and it moves out of leaf down conc grad

50
Q

what factors affect transpiration?

A

light- stomata open in light so CO2 enters so rate increases
temp- warm temp means water mols have more energy so evaporate faster so higher conc grad
humidity- less humid means higher conc grad
wind- air movement blows water away from stomata so increases conc grad

51
Q

what is a potometer?
how do you use it?

A

apparatus that measures transpiration rates (uptake of water)
1) cut shoot underwater to prevent air getting to it
2)assemble potometer underwater and insert shoot underwater
3) remove from water but keep end of capillary tube submerges
4) dry leaves and allow time for shoot to acclimatise then shut tap
5) remove end of cap tube from water until 1 bubble forms then put back
6)record start position of bubble and start stopwatch and record distance moved per unit time
7)rate of air bubble movement= rate of transpiration

52
Q

structure of phylem

A

sieve tube elements (living cells that form tube) and companion cells (one for each sieve tube element, they carry out living functions for them)

53
Q

what is translocation?

A

movement of solutes (assimilates) to where theyre needed in plant
energy requiring process
moves solutes from sources (where its made) to sinks (where its used up) down conc grad
enzymes maintain this conc grad by changing solutes at sink (breaking down or making)

54
Q

what is the mass flow hypothesis?

A

suggests how transport in phloem happens
1) - active transport loads solutes from companion cells to sieve tubes at source
- this lowers water pot in sieve tubes so water enters by osmosis from xylem to companion cells
- this creates high press in sieve tubes at source end of phloem
2) - at sink end, solutes are removed from phloem to be used up
- this increases water pot inside sieve tubes by osmosis
- this lowers pressure in sieve tubes
3) - the result is a pressure grad from source to sink
- this grad pushes solutes along sieve to sink
- when they reach the sink, solutes are used or stored

55
Q

evidence for mass flow

A
  • if ring of bark (contains phloem not xylem) is removed, a bulge forms. fluid in bulge has higher conc of sugars than fluid below ring- evidence for downward flow of sugars
  • radioactive tracer can track movement of organic substances
  • pressure in phloem can be investigated using aphids (pierce phloem then bodies removed leaving mouthpart behind so sap flows out). sap flows quicker nearer leaves- evidence for pressure grad
  • metabolic inhibitor (stops ATP production) put in phloem, translocation stops- evidence active transport involved
56
Q

objections to mass flow

A
  • sugar travels to many sinks not just one with highest water pot as model suggests
  • sieve plates would create barrier to mass flow- lots of pressure needed to get solutes through at reasonable rate
57
Q

how can translocation be modelled using radioactive tracers?

A

supply part of plant w organic substance with radioactive label eg radioactive CO2
this becomes incorporated into organic substances produced by leaf which will be moved around by translocation
movement tracked by autoradiography
plant is killed and then placed on photographic film to reveal where tracer has spread to (radioactive substance is present wherever film turns black)