Excretion Flashcards
define excretion
the removal of metabolic waste from body
define metabolic waste
substance that’s produced in excess by metabolic processes in cells, may become toxic
explain how the lungs act as excretory organs
- carbon dioxide diffuses into alveoli which is excreted during expiration
explain how the liver acts as an excretory organ
- has many metabolic processes, products pass into the bile for excretion with the faeces
- converts excess amino acids to ammonia via deamination, ammonia then converted to urea
explain how the kidneys act as excretory organs
urea is removed from the blood and becomes part of urine
explain how the skin acts as an excretory organ
releases sweat (contains urea, ammonia, water), important in osmoregulation and thermoregulation
why is excretion important?
- build up of metabolic waste could be fatal
- could alter pH, preventing normal metabolism
- could act as inhibitors, reducing enzyme activity
why does carbon dioxide need to be excreted?
- CO2 combines with H2O to form H2CO3 which dissociated into H+ AND HCO3- (catalysed by carbonic anhydrase) in red blood cell.
- H+ decrease pH changing tertiary structure of Hb reducing its affinity for oxygen
- Hb and H+ form haemoglobinic acid. CO2 and Hb form carbaminohaemoglobin. Both are unable to combine to O2 as normal
- small pH change detected by medulla oblongata which increases breathing rate
- if blood pH drops below 7.35 it may cause respiratory acidosis (headaches, drowsiness)
why do nitrogenous compounds need to be excreted?
- body can’t store excess a a
- aa transported to liver for deamination to form ammonia which is then used to make urea.
function of bile duct
- carries bile from liver to gall bladder
what’s the histology (microscopic anatomy) of the liver?
- liver divided into lobes which are divided into cylindrical lobules
- vessels from hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein run between and parallel to lobules (inter-lobular vessels)
- blood from these vessels mix in the sinusoids, blood is in close contact with hepatocytes
- Kupffer cells (macrophages) in sinusoid break down old RBCs and kill bac
- bile made in hepatocytes released into bile canaliculi which join together to form the bile duct
- hepatic vein at centre of lobule (intra-lobular vessel) , sinusoids empty into it
features of liver cells
- cuboidal shape with many microvilli on surface
- very dense cytoplasm
3 functions of the liver
- glycogen storage
- detoxification
- formation of urea
in what form is glycogen stored in hepatocytes?
- as granules in cytoplasm
What substances do hepatocytes detoxify?
- alcohol
- recreational drugs
- medicines
- H2O2
what are some enzymes found in hepatocytes and their function
-
catalase: breaks down
H2O2 into H2O and O2 - cytochrome p450: group of enzymes that break down drugs
outline the detoxification of alcohol in hepatocytes
- alcohol (ethanol) —> ethanal —> ethanoic acid (less harmful)
- NADH produced in both conversions
- ethanoic acid also called ethanoate/acetate
- NADH produced in this process so less NAD available to break down f a for respiration so they’re converted back to lipids and stored as fats leading to cirrhosis.
deamination equation
a a + O2 —> keto acid + ammonia
outline the formation of urea
amino acid + O2 –(1)–> ammonia + keto acid
ammonia + CO2 –(2)–> urea (less soluble and less toxic than ammonia)
1 - deamination
2 - ornithine cycle
what’s the role of the kidneys?
remove waste products from blood, reabsorb water and produce urine
name the outer region of the kidneys
cortex
name the inner region of the kidney
medulla
what’s at the centre of the kidneys?
pelvis leading to ureter
what are the regions in the kidney surrounded by?
capsule
what’s the fine structure of the kidneys?
- nephrons start at the Bowman’s capsule
- the rest is a coiled tube that passes through the cortex, forms a loops down into medulla and back to cortex then re-joins collecting duct that passes down into the medulla
what does the renal artery split into?
afferent arteriole which leads to glomerulus
where does blood from the glomerulus go?
flows into efferent arteriole carrying blood to more capillaries surrounding rest of tubule
blood in the capillaries (surrounding the rest of the tubule) flow together into the…
renal vein
each glomerulus is surrounded by…
Bowman’s capsule where ultrafiltration takes place - fluid from blood pushed into Bc
what are the 3 layers that act as a barrier between capillaries and lumen of Bc?
- endothelium of capillary
- basement membrane
- epithelial cells of the Bc
features of endothelium of capillaries?
- fenestrations which are pores in cells
- narrow gaps between cells of the capillary wall
- blood plasma passes through pores, out of capillary
features of basement membrane?
fine mesh of collagen fibres and glycoproteins, prevents passage of large molecules (most RBCs + proteins)