Excretion and liver Flashcards
Define the term excretion
The removal of metabolic waste products from the body
Explain the importance of excretion in maintaining metabolism and homeostasis.
- Waste products are toxic if they are allowed to build up
2. Maintains the water balance and pH
Name the 3 main metabolic waste products in mammals, describe where they come from and where they are excreted
- Carbon dioxide- One of the waste products of cellular respiration which is excreted from the lungs
- Bile pigments- Formed from the breakdown of haemoglobin from old red blood cells in the liver. They are excreted in the bile from the liver into the small intestine via the gall bladder and bile duct. They colour faeces.
- Nitrogenous waste products (urea)- formed form the breakdown of excess amino acids by the liver. Urea is excreted by the kidneys in the urine.
Name the nitrogenous waste products in mammals, fish, birds and insects.
- All mammals produce urea as their nitrogenous waste.
- Fish produce ammonia
- Birds and insects produce uric acid.
Describe the location of the liver in mammals and draw and label a diagram to show the blood vessels going to and from the liver.
- It lies just below the diaphragm and is made up of several lobes
- Oxygenated blood goes to the liver via the hepatic artery (branched off from the aorta)
- Deoxygenated blood is removed from the liver via the hepatic vein (which joins to the inferior vena cava)
- The liver is also supplied with blood by the hepatic portal vein. This carries blood loaded with the products of digestion straight from the intestines to the liver.
Name the type of cell which makes up the liver and describe the adaptations they have for their functions.
- Hepatocytes have a large nuclei
- prominent Golgi apparatus
- lots of mitochondria, indicating they are very metabolically active cells
Draw and label a diagram to show the arrangement of tissues within the liver.
p416 Difficult to explain
- Venule from hepatic portal vein and arteriole from hepatic artery mix in the sinusoids
- The sinusoids are surrounded by hepatocytes
- There is a big white space in the middle which is the bile canaliculli.
- There are Kupffer cells on the hepatocytes
Label and annotate a photomicrograph of liver tissue at low and high power to show key histological features
- Low power- Central vein is big white circle type thing
- Sinusoids are white lines in the pink
- The cells are pink parts with nuclei in - High power- Can see red blood cells in white sinusoids
- Kupffer cells can be seen around the edge of sinusoids
- Hepatocytes are big pink areas- can see nucleus and little dots which are mitochondria
Describe the role of Kupffer cells in the liver.
- Act as resident macrophages of the liver, ingesting foreign particles and helping to protect them from disease.
- They are in the sinusoids
What are the sinusoids
- Blood from hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein is mixed in spaces called sinusoids which are surrounded by hepatocytes.
- This mixing increases the oxygen content of the blood from the hepatic portal vein, supplying the hepatocytes with enough oxygen for their needs.
- They contain Kupffer cells
Describe how bile is formed and how it travels to where it is stored.
- Hepatocytes secrete bile from the breakdown of the blood into spaces called the canaliculi
- From these, the bile drains into the bile ductiles which take it to the Gall bladder.
Describe 6 roles of the liver.
- Carbohydrate metabolism
- Deamination of excess amino acids
- Synthesis plasma proteins
- (Transamination)
- Production of urea (ornithine cycle)
- Detoxification
- Production of bile
Describe the role hepatocytes play in the control of blood glucose concentration.
- Carbohydrate metabolism
- When blood glucose levels rise, insulin levels rise and stimulate hepatocytes to convert glucose to the storage carbohydrate glycogen.
- When blood glucose levels start to fall, the hepatocytes convert the glycogen back to glucose under the influence of the hormone glucagon
Define the term transamination
- The conversion of one amino acid into another.
- This is important because the diet does not always contain the right balance of amino acids but transamination can over come the problems this might cause.
Define deamination
- The removal of the amino group from amino acids