5:1:2 Excretion as an Example of Homeostasis Flashcards
Define excretion
The process by which toxic waste products of metabolism and substances in excess of requirement are removed from the body (e.g. lungs exhaling CO2). It is a key process in homeostasis
What are the examples of metabolic waste, their source, and why an excess is bad
Describe the external structure of the liver
- Supplied with blood from two sources (oxygenated via the hepatic artery from the heart, deoxygenated via the hepatic portal vein from the digestive system)
- The liver needs oxygenated blood to efficiently carry out its roles
- The liver needs deoxygenated blood to absorb and metabolise stress nutrients stored in the blood
- Deoxygenated blood leaves the liver from the hepatic vein
- Connected directly to the gall bladder which stores bile (bile salts and pigments) and releases it into the duodenum via the bile duct
Describe the internal structure of the liver
- The liver is made up of cells known as hepatocytes which carry out all functions required
- Liver is divided into many lobules which are separated by connective tissue
- Each lobule is supplied with blood via branches from the hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein
- Blood is carried in wide capillaries known as sinusoids which are lined with an incomplete layer of endothelial cells to allow substance exchange
- Each lobule is connected to a branch of the hepatic vein to drain the blood
- Lobules are known as functional units of the liver as all the functions occur within each individual one
What are the functions of the liver
- The storage of glycogen
- The formation of urea
- Detoxification
How does the liver store glycogen
- Converts glucose into glycogen via glycogenesis which helps to regulate blood glucose concentration
- Insulin detects high levels of glucose in the blood, glycogenesis occurs and synthesises the glucose
- Glycogen acts as compact and efficient carbohydrate storage molecule
Define glycogenesis
The synthesis of glycogen from glucose molecules, triggered by insulin
How does the liver form urea
- Proteins in our diet are digested into amino acids which are then absorbed into the blood and transported to the liver
- Instead of being excreted the excess amino acids are deaminated (NH2 removed)
- The ammonia formed from this deamination is very soluble and highly toxic, so is combined with CO2 and converted by the liver into the less soluble and less toxic urea, which is transported to the kidneys
- Happens during the ornithine cycle
Write the equation for the deamination of an amino acid
What are main products and reactants in the ornithine cycle
- One molecule of CO2 required
- Combined with two amino groups
- One molecule of urea produced
Define detoxification
Term used to describe the breakdown (by the liver) of substances that aren’t needed or are toxic (lactate, alcohol, hormones, medicinal drugs)
Describe the process of lactate metabolism
- Lactate is the end product of anaerobic respiration
- It is an energy rich compound that can be restored by cardiac muscles and other tissue
- Excess lactate is absorbed by hepatocytes and metabolises
- It is converted to pyruvate in the liver
- Some pyruvate is respired in the mitochondria to provide energy to convert the rest of the lactate to glucose
Describe the process of alcohol metabolism
- Alcohol (in the form of ethanol) is absorbed in the stomach and transported in the blood until it is absorbed by hepatocytes
- Ethanol is converted to ethanal then ethanoic acid by the enzyme ethanol dehydrogenase
- The ethanoic acid combined with coenzyme A to produce acetyl coenzyme A which is used in respiration
- During this process H+ atoms are released, which removed by reduce NAD
- The metabolism of alcohol takes up a lot of energy, as well as reducing a lot of NAD which helps in the metabolism of fat, which leads to the fat instead being stored which gives rise to cirrhosis
What is cirrhosis
Stored fat in hepatocytes which reduces their ability to function and scars the liver. It is caused by excessive alcohol consumption
Describe the process of hormone metabolism
- Protein hormones and peptide hormones are hydrolysed into amino acids
- These amino acids can be a deaminated to form urea
How is the histology of liver studie
- Sections of the liver can be stained and then viewed under a microscope
What functions are the kidneys responsible for
- As an osmoregulation organ, regulating the water content of the blood
- As an excretory organ, excreting the toxic waste products of metabolism (urea/salts)
Label the structures of the kidneys, and explain their functions (renal artery and vein, kidneys, ureter, bladder, urethra)